The nominee that
raises, and embodies, some defining national questions.
The roundtable’s
second presenter, Diana Polley of
Southern New Hampshire University, nominated J. Hector St. John de Crèvecoeur’s
Letters from an American
Farmer. As Diana noted, Crèvecoeur’s book, which while generally treated
as non-fiction could also be described (as she nicely put it) as the first
American novel, represents in any case one of the first post-Revolutionary attempts
to address—and still to date one of the most extended and explicit engagements
with—the evolving and crucial question of what “American” means and entails.
Diana did a
great job making the case for why it is precisely Crèvecoeur’s emphasis on
questions, rather than any particular answer (of his or of ours in analyzing his
work), that makes his book one all Americans should read. For one thing, those
questions allow him to consider virtually every significant issue of the era
(most of which remain salient today); for another, his opening question, “What
then is the American, this new man?” is just as open and potent in 2013 as it
was in 1782; and for yet another, thinking of American identity as a series of
questions highlights as well the fraught, contested, and potentially mythic
nature of our national community.
Diana likewise
mentioned how much Crèvecoeur’s own life and identity highlight such American
questions, and I wanted to drive home that level to the book’s appeal. As she
noted, it’s possible to describe Crèvecoeur
as largely foreign to America—he was born and died in France, and by the time
he published the book he was living in London. But if do categorize him as an
international visitor to the U.S., we’d have to do the same for one of the Revolution’s
most influential voices: Thomas Paine,
who was born in England and spent his final years in France. Which is to say,
Revolutionary America wasn’t just international because
of Lafayette, and transnational
AmericanStudies goes as far back as America does. Crèvecoeur can help us think
about all of that.
Next nominee
tomorrow,
Ben
PS.
Thoughts on this nomination? Other nominees for an Even Bigger Read?
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