Ethnology and Empire: Languages, Literature, and the Making of the North American Borderlands

Forsideomslag
NYU Press, 16. okt. 2015 - 241 sider

Winner, The Early American Literature Book Prize

Ethnology and Empire tells stories about words and ideas, and ideas about
words that developed in concert with shifting conceptions about Native peoples
and western spaces in the nineteenth-century United States. Contextualizing the
emergence of Native American linguistics as both a professionalized research
discipline and as popular literary concern of American culture prior to the
U.S.-Mexico War, Robert Lawrence Gunn reveals the manner in
which relays between the developing research practices of ethnology, works of
fiction, autobiography, travel narratives, Native oratory, and sign languages
gave imaginative shape to imperial activity in the western borderlands.


In literary and
performative settings that range from the U.S./Mexico borderlands to the Great
Lakes region of Tecumseh’s Pan-Indian Confederacy and the hallowed halls of
learned societies in New York and Philadelphia, Ethnology and Empire models
an interdisciplinary approach to networks of peoples, spaces, and communication
practices that transformed the boundaries of U.S. empire through a
transnational and scientific archive. Emphasizing the culturally transformative
impacts western expansionism and Indian Removal, Ethnology and Empire reimagines
U.S. literary and cultural production for future conceptions of hemispheric
American literatures.

 

Indhold

Introduction
1
Ethnological Linguistics
17
Empire Sign Languages and the Long Expedition
52
John Dunn Hunter Tecumseh and the Linguistic
83
Native Networks
114
Notes
187
Index
229
Copyright

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Om forfatteren (2015)

Robert Lawrence Gunn is Associate Professor of English at the University of Texas at El Paso.

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