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American Vernacular: Popular Culture, Performance, and the Question of National History, 1871--1915.

机译:美国白话:大众文化,表演和民族历史问题,1871--1915年。

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摘要

Scholars tracing America's development into a powerful modern nation between the end of the Civil War and the beginning of World War One have traditionally considered popular culture, and especially popular culture's depictions of national history, as a vehicle for conveying ascendant socioeconomic ideals of "incorporation" or "Americanization." In this view, vernacular histories—histories rooted in local conceptions of self, community, and experience—provided a nostalgic reminder of a lost golden age, a diversion from the tasks of everyday life, or a quality to be appropriated and remade to fit prevailing narratives of economic and territorial consolidation and white racial superiority. This dissertation, by contrast, considers how popular representations of national history and citizenship were frequently framed by local conceptions of past and present. Specifically, I examine four performances where groups that were (or imagined themselves to be) regionally, ethnically, or racially marginalized by the nation's shift to modernity enacted their pasts for national audiences, and the ways in which these performances circulated vernacular versions of U.S. history and culture for a consuming public.;Chapter one examines the Fisk Jubilee Singers in their first decade (1871-1881). The chapter discusses their performances of slave spirituals as cultural expression and as political practice in a decade spanning the end of Reconstruction and the rise of Jim Crow. Spirituals embodied ideals of self-making, piety, communal solidarity, and liberation. The singers, like their slave forebears, used the spiritual to achieve a level of autonomy, cohesion, and pride as they negotiated the contours of citizenship. The performances examined in chapters two and three struggled with the question of the ideal of "progress" in late nineteenth century historical narration. Chapter two describes the emergence of a particular brand of rugged self-making, seen as central to American identity and threatened by the "settlement" of the West, which was enacted and perpetuated at Buffalo Bill's The Drama of Civilization (1886-1887). Buffalo Bill Cody astonished audiences with a spectacular pageant reenacting the "settlement" of the West, but his presentations also mourned the potential loss of "rugged individualism" with the closing of the frontier. Chapter three considers the ways in which the Hull-House Labor Museum (1900-1910) dramatized a history of immigrant craftspeople as integral to seeing America as a workingman's republic, the benefactor of a transnational, transhistorical process of self-, community-, and nation-making through indigenous craftsmanship. Chapter four reads The Birth of a Nation (1915) as a highly divisive neo-Confederate history that dramatized a discourse of northern conspiracy and southern patriotism. Ending with this popular film, the dissertation also highlights the dangers of vernacular history becoming normative.;Reading these accented dramatizations of national history within and against key social and economic developments, the dissertation argues that popular culture provided a language for registering disillusionment with the shift to modernity, including links between whiteness and patriotism, territorial expansion and "settlement," and technological and social progress. For the performers and the impresarios of these performances, enacting a familiar past as foundationally "American" provided a framework for self-making, "authenticity," and ambition that shaped their conception of the meaning of modern citizenship and of their own place in the nation at large.
机译:在南北战争结束至第一次世界大战开始之间追踪美国发展成为强大的现代国家的学者一直以来都将流行文化,尤其是流行文化对国家历史的描述视为传播“融合”的上升的社会经济理想的工具。或“美国化”。在这种观点下,白话历史-根植于当地的自我,社区和经验概念的历史-怀旧地提醒人们失去了黄金时代,偏离了日常工作,或者被赋予和重塑以适应当时的流行水平经济和领土合并以及白人优势的叙述。相比之下,本论文考虑了如何以当地的过去和现在的构架来频繁地代表国家历史和公民身份。具体来说,我考察了四场演出,这些演出因国家向现代主义的转移而被(或想象中的)在地区,种族或种族边缘化的群体为国家观众制定了他们的过去,以及这些表演如何传播美国历史的白话版本。和第一章(1871-1881年)。本章讨论了奴隶精神在重建结束和吉姆·克罗(Jim Crow)兴起的十年中作为文化表现形式和政治实践的表现。精神主义者体现了自我创造,虔诚,社区团结和解放的理想。歌手像他们的奴隶前辈一样,在协商公民身份的过程中,利用精神来达到一定程度的自治,凝聚力和自豪感。在第二和第三章中考察的表演与十九世纪末期历史叙事中的“进步”理想有关。第二章描述了一种坚固耐用的特殊品牌的出现,这种品牌被认为是美国身份的核心,并受到西方“和解”的威胁,西方在布法罗·比尔(Buffalo Bill)的《文明的戏剧》(1886-1887)中得以制定和延续。布法罗·比尔·科迪(Buffalo Bill Cody)举行壮观的选美大赛,重演了西方的“定居点”,使观众大吃一惊,但他的演讲也为边境封闭带来的“粗individual的个人主义”的丧失感到哀悼。第三章考虑了赫尔豪斯劳工博物馆(Hull-House Labour Museum)(1900-1910)戏剧化移民工匠的历史的方式,这对于将美国视为工人共和国是不可或缺的,这是跨国的,跨历史的自我,社区和社会进程的受益者。通过土著手工艺创造民族。第四章将“民族的诞生”(1915年)解读为高度分裂的新联邦历史,其戏剧性地论述了北共谋和南爱国主义。在这部流行电影的结尾,论文还强调了白话历史成为规范的危险。阅读了这些突出的国家历史戏剧在重要的社会和经济发展中以及与之相反的重要戏剧化,论文认为,流行文化提供了一种语言,用以记录人们对幻灭的幻灭现代化,包括白人与爱国主义,领土扩张与“解决”之间的联系,以及技术和社会进步。对于表演者和这些表演的表演者来说,将熟悉的过去作为基本的“美国人”来制定,就为自我创造,“真实性”和雄心壮志提供了一个框架,从而塑造了他们对现代公民的涵义及其在社会中的地位的观念。整个国家。

著录项

  • 作者

    Milner, Gabriel Farren.;

  • 作者单位

    University of California, Berkeley.;

  • 授予单位 University of California, Berkeley.;
  • 学科 American Studies.;History United States.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2013
  • 页码 216 p.
  • 总页数 216
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

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