Thanksgiving: The Biography of an American Holiday

Thanksgiving: The Biography of an American Holiday

by James W. Baker
Thanksgiving: The Biography of an American Holiday

Thanksgiving: The Biography of an American Holiday

by James W. Baker

Paperback(First Edition)

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Overview

In this, the first in-depth study of the most American of holidays, James Baker sweeps away lingering myths and misconceptions to show how this celebration day was born and grew to be an essential part of our national spirit. Thanksgiving: The Biography of an American Holiday opens with an overview of the popular mythos of the holiday before discussing its possible religious and cultural precedents. This classic Yankee holiday is examined in historical and contemporary detail that embraces everything from proclamations, sermons, and local and regional traditions to family reunions, turkey dinners, and recipes. Thanksgiving's evolving face is illustrated with charming and often revealing period prints that chart our changing attitudes: the influence of Victorian sentiment in Thanksgiving's development, Progressive utilitarianism, intellectual "debunking," patriotic wartime reclamation, and 1960s-era protest. Thanksgiving remains controversial up to the present day, as Mayflower descendants, Native Americans, and commercial exploiters compete for the American public's opinion of the holiday's contemporary significance and its future status. This is an intelligent and illuminating introduction to a beloved holiday and a fascinating cultural history of America and Americana.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781584658016
Publisher: University of New Hampshire Press
Publication date: 10/30/2009
Series: Revisiting New England
Edition description: First Edition
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 5.90(w) x 9.10(h) x 0.90(d)
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

JAMES W. BAKER was the director of research at Plimoth Plantation for many years and has acted as an authority for numerous Thanksgiving Day exhibits, articles, newscasts, and children's books.

Table of Contents

Foreword
Thanksgiving in America – Peter J. Gomes
Acknowledgments
Introduction
A Thanksgiving Detective Story
New England’s Puritan Holy Days
The Traditional New England Thanksgiving
The Classic New England Thanksgiving Dinner
The Nation Embraces Thanksgiving, 1780–1880
Nineteenth-Century Holiday Imagery in Literature and Art
Enter the Pilgrims
Pilgrims Are for Kids: Thanksgiving in the Progressive Classroom
Imaging the Holiday
Parades, Patriotism, and Consumption
Consensus and Competition: The Postwar Thanksgiving
New Myths for Old —Thanksgiving under Siege
Thanksgiving Now, Then, and Forever
Appendixes
A Thanksgiving Poem – Henry Bliss
Some Early Thanksgiving Recipes
United American Indians of New England Press Release
Notes
Bibliography
Index

What People are Saying About This

Nathaniel Philbrick

"For anyone interested in New England and America and the lengths to which our collective fascination with the past influences what we do today, James Baker's Thanksgiving: The Biography of an American Holiday is a must read. Combining a lifetime of research with a wonderfully readable prose style, Baker has created a tour de force of historical and cultural analysis."

John W. Tyler

“The history of this quintessentially American holiday is both more complex and hotly disputed than most of us gathered around the Thanksgiving dinner table realize. James Baker convincingly argues that there is no direct line of descent from the Pilgrim harvest festival of 1621 to the modern American celebration. Instead, Baker leads us on a fascinating and circuitous route through Puritan days of fasting and thanksgiving and Yankee celebrations of Forefather’s Day right up to the American Indian Movement’s “Day of Mourning.” Little in the way of evidence escapes the eye of this keen cultural historian; he shows us early nineteenth-century recipes for turkey and all the appropriate fixings; the first (though surprising late) visual images of the Pilgrim Fathers and their Native guests; classroom efforts to Americanize recent immigrants through pageants and the ubiquitous cut-out paper decorations; and the floats of the Macy’s Thanksgiving Day parade. Baker serves up an appropriately rich feast for the occasion.”

William M. Fowler

For good or ill Americans have always considered themselves exceptional. This remarkable self image first appeared on a fall day in 1621 when the Pilgrims gathered 'so [that] we might after a special manner rejoice together' and reflect on the 'special providence' God had granted them. Their Native American guests watched bemused. Like 'Camelot' Baker writes 'there once was a time when with the best intentions, two very different cultures came together.' From that moment on Thanksgiving has become the most persistent, if not controversial, celebration in America. Perfectly historical (mythological?) and encrusted over the centuries in hyperbole and invention, it has nonetheless survived as one of the least pretentious of all our national holidays dedicated to simple fare and family gathering. No one but Jim Baker could unravel the true meaning of this holiday with such expertise and grace. By explaining 'Thanksgiving' Baker goes to heart of revealing American character.

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