Fortune, Fame, and Desire: Promoting the Self in the Long Nineteenth Century

Fortune, Fame, and Desire: Promoting the Self in the Long Nineteenth Century

by Sharon Hartman Strom
Fortune, Fame, and Desire: Promoting the Self in the Long Nineteenth Century

Fortune, Fame, and Desire: Promoting the Self in the Long Nineteenth Century

by Sharon Hartman Strom

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Overview

In the middle decades of the nineteenth century, a widening set of opportunities in the public sphere opened up for ambitious men and women in the loosely structured stratum of “the middle class.” Much of the attention to the marketplace between 1820 and 1910 has described entrepreneurship and the beginnings of a more sophisticated economy, but not much has been paid to the commodification of the self. This book sets out to explore the promotion of the self in the rapidly growing economy and political flux of the nineteenth century. Its geography extends through New England, New York, the new states of the Midwest, and the great cities of the Mid-Atlantic, with an occasional trip to New Orleans, San Francisco and Los Angeles. The approach is biographical, using representative middle class figures to illuminate cultural and social history. Aided by more cheaply produced print and the clamor of the American public for entertainment both high and low brow, the figures described in this book strove for fame, sometimes achieved good fortune, and acted out desires for sexual pleasure, political success, and achieving the ideal in society. In doing so they questioned and rearranged the ideas of the early Republic. Poised between the dying class structure of the late eighteenth century and the rise of a more hierarchical one in the early twentieth, they took advantage of a society in flux to make their mark on American culture.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781442272668
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers, Inc.
Publication date: 09/19/2016
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 288
File size: 10 MB

About the Author

Sharon Hartman Strom is Professor Emerita of History and Women’s Studies at the University of Rhode Island.

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments
Introduction

1 “I Have an Ambition that Burns Like Fire”: Ephraim George Squier, Race, and the North American Travelogue
2 “The Right of Defining One’s Position Seems to Be a Very Sacred Privilege in America:” Lola Montez, Miriam Follin, E.G. Squier, and DeWitt Clinton Hitchcock
3 “Yours in the Name of Freedom”: Frances Watkins Harper, Harriet Wilson, and the Legacy of William Watkins
4 “One’s Own Branch of the Human Race”: Frances Watkins Harper, Anna Dickinson, and Frederick Douglass
5 “Self Reliance,” “Universal Redemption,” and “The Obsessed Woman”: Warren Chase, Joseph Osgood Barrett, and Juliet Stillman Severence
6 Race, the Woman Question and “Liberty in Thought and Expression”: Harriet Wilson, Paschal Beverly Randolph, and Laura Briggs James
7 Coda ‘The Present Age”

Index
About the Author
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