The American Revolution conjures a series of iconographic images in the contemporary American imagination. In these imagined scenes, defiant Patriots fight against British Redcoats for freedom and democracy, while a unified citizenry rallies behind them and the American cause. But the lived experience of the Revolution was a more complex matter, filled with uncertainty, fear, and discord. In The American Revolution Reborn, editors Patrick Spero and Michael Zuckerman compile essays from a new generation of multidisciplinary scholars that render the American Revolution as a time of intense ambiguity and frightening contingency.
The American Revolution Reborn parts company with the Revolution of our popular imagination and diverges from the work done by historians of the era from the past half-century. In the first section, ’Civil Wars, ’ contributors rethink the heroic terms of Revolutionary-era allegiance and refute the idea of patriotic consensus. In the following section, ’Wider Horizons, ’ essayists destabilize the historiographical inevitability of America as a nation. The studies gathered in the third section, ’New Directions, ’ present new possibilities for scholarship on the American Revolution. And the last section, titled ’Legacies, ’ collects essays that deal with the long afterlife of the Revolution and its effects on immigration, geography, and international politics. With an introduction by Spero and a conclusion by Zuckerman, this volume heralds a substantial and revelatory rebirth in the study of the American Revolution.
Contributors: Zara Anishanslin, Mark Boonshoft, Denver Brunsman, Katherine Carté Engel, Aaron Spencer Fogleman, Travis Glasson, Edward G. Gray, David C. Hsiung, Ned C. Landsman, Michael A. Mc Donnell, Kimberly Nath, Bryan Rosenblithe, David S. Shields, Patrick Spero, Matthew Spooner, Aaron Sullivan, Michael Zuckerman.
Innehållsförteckning
Introduction. Origins
—Patrick Spero
PART I. CIVIL WARS: CHALLENGING THE PATRIOTIC NARRATIVE
Chapter 1. War Stories: Remembering and Forgetting the American Revolution
—Michael A. Mc Donnell
Chapter 2. The Intimacies of Occupation: Loyalties, Compromise, and Betrayal in Revolutionary-Era Newport
—Travis Glasson
Chapter 3. Uncommon Cause: The Challenges of Disaffection in Revolutionary Pennsylvania
—Aaron Sullivan
Chapter 4. Loyalism, Citizenship, American Identity: The Shoemaker Family
—Kimberly Nath
Chapter 5. ’Executioners of Their Friends and Brethren’: Naval Impressment as an Atlantic Civil War
—Denver Brunsman
PART II. WIDER HORIZONS: DECENTERING THE NATIONALISTIC NARRATIVE
Chapter 6. British Union and American Revolution: Imperial Authoritye and the Multinational State
—Ned C. Landsman
Chapter 7. Revisiting the Bishop Controversy
—Katherine Carté Engel
Chapter 8. Empire’s Vital Extremities: British Africa and the Coming of the American Revolution
—Bryan Rosenblithe
Chapter 9. The Great Awakening, Presbyterian Education, and the Mobilization of Power in the Revolutionary Mid- Atlantic
—Mark Boonshoft
PART III. NEW DIRECTIONS
Chapter 10. ’This Is the Skin of a Whit[e] Man’: Material Memories of Violence in Sullivan’s Campaign
—Zara Anishanslin
Chapter 11. Environmental History and the War of Independence: Saltpeter and the Continental Army’s Shortage of Gunpowder
—David C. Hsiung
Chapter 12. The Problem of Order and the Transfer of Slave Property in the Revolutionary South
—Matthew Spooner
PART IV. LEGACIES: THE AFTERLIFE OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
Chapter 13. The United States and the Transformation of Transatlantic Migration During the Age of Revolution and Emancipation
—Aaron Spencer Fogleman
Chapter 14. First Partition: The Troubled Origins of the Mason-Dixon Line
—Edward G. Gray
Chapter 15. The Power to Be Reborn
—David S. Shields
Conclusion. Beyond the Rebirth of the Revolution: Coming to Terms with Coming of Age
—Michael Zuckerman
Notes
List of Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
Om författaren
Michael Zuckerman is a Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Pennsylvania.