2012
DOI: 10.1353/eam.2012.0001
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Provincial Nationalism: Civic Rivalry in Postrevolutionary American Magazines

Abstract: This essay uses magazines as an entry point for analyzing the relationship between print and nation formation in the postrevolutionary era. Produced mainly in the country’s leading urban centers, magazines cultivated an outlook I call “provincial nationalism”; that is to say, magazine literati invoked nationalist rhetoric to publicize the virtuous character and intellectual prowess of their respective communities. Focusing on New York’s American Magazine, Philadelphia’s American Museum, and the Boston Magazine… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
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“…Champions of individual localities often sought to turn the state's construction of a national transportation infrastructure to their own advantage, describing an interconnected Union with their own locality as its hub in order to secure local support. 11 Johnson made this paradoxical strand of the Republican Party's state-building creed the intellectual keystone of his work on behalf of an expert-administered Panama Canal. Richard John and Brian Balogh have already urged scholars to consider how preceding political arrangements laid the foundation for this period's growth of federal administrative capacity.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Champions of individual localities often sought to turn the state's construction of a national transportation infrastructure to their own advantage, describing an interconnected Union with their own locality as its hub in order to secure local support. 11 Johnson made this paradoxical strand of the Republican Party's state-building creed the intellectual keystone of his work on behalf of an expert-administered Panama Canal. Richard John and Brian Balogh have already urged scholars to consider how preceding political arrangements laid the foundation for this period's growth of federal administrative capacity.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%