{"title":"Rip Van Winkle 的共和国:历史与记忆中的华盛顿-欧文》,安德鲁-伯斯坦和南希-伊森伯格编(评论)","authors":"Leila Mansouri","doi":"10.1353/eal.2024.a934215","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Rip Van Winkle's Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory</em> ed. by Andrew Burstein and Nancy Isenberg <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Leila Mansouri (bio) </li> </ul> <em>Rip Van Winkle's Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory</em><br/> <small>andrew burstein</small> and <small>nancy isenberg</small>, <small>editors</small><br/> Louisiana State University Press, 2022<br/> 214 pp. <p>Edited by historians Andrew Burstein and Nancy Isenberg, <em>Rip Van Winkle's Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory</em> marks the bicentennial of the 1819 publication of <em>The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent</em>. with an interdisciplinary collection of essays that engage both the historical Irving and his writing's continued multifaceted resonance with American audiences. The volume is an outgrowth of a canceled 2020 symposium that had been set to be held at Historic Hudson Valley, a nonprofit that promotes and seeks to educate the public on Hudson Valley historic landmarks. It includes work not only from academic historians and literary scholars but also from two members of Historic Hudson Valley's staff, the principal historian of a Westchester County public history project focused on the Revolutionary War, and Hollywood actor and screenwriter Curtis Armstrong, who has sought to adapt Irving's work. These contributors collectively stake out a conversation that bridges what usually is a sharp divide between scholarship on the early American period and the reception of early American authors in popular culture and present-day public events. In doing so, their essays offer a set of trenchant but contradictory answers to the question that animates the collection's preface: Why does Washing-ton Irving still matter?</p> <p>Readers of <em>Early American Literature</em> likely take one of those answers for granted: Irving matters because his writings still offer scholars productive entry into key aspects of early US literature and society. <em>Rip Van Winkle's Republic</em> presents a number of fresh and compelling readings of <em>The Sketch Book</em>—including of its two most famous stories, \"Rip Van Winkle\" and \"The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.\" Two standouts among these are Michelle Sizemore's \"Rites and Times of the Grand Tour\" and Elizabeth L. Bradley's \"Tracing Northern Slavery in the Knickerbocker Stories.\" In the former, Sizemore situates <em>The Sketch Book</em>, which Irving composed during an extended trip to Europe, in relation to the rise of the Grand Tour, which in the wake of the American Revolution became a rite of passage for white, <strong>[End Page 495]</strong> well-off young American men seeking to connect with what they saw as their cultural and civilizational forebears. Attending especially to <em>The Sketch Book</em>'s depictions of England, Sizemore argues that through them Geoffrey Crayon, <em>The Sketch Book</em>'s fictional narrator, invokes and distills a raced and classed <em>Anglo</em>-American identity that positions the United States as Britain's imperial heir and Grand Touring literary pilgrims such as himself as the new American empire's natural leaders. In doing so, she deftly denaturalizes the Americanness of Irving's literary nationalism, suggesting that it was an ethnically English American identity constituted through real and imaginative travel to Britain that produced early US imperial consciousness and enabled <em>The Sketch Book</em> to envisage an imperial US frontier from which Native Americans naturally vanish.</p> <p>Bradley, who is currently vice president of programs and engagement at Historic Hudson Valley, focuses instead on an aspect of Irving's life in New York City and the Hudson Valley that receives relatively little attention in his prose: slavery in New York State. As Bradley notes, long after New York passed a law that gradually abolished slavery, interactions with enslaved New Yorkers remained a fact of daily life in Irving's world. Her essay not only brings to light archival records that suggest Irving routinely encountered those his neighbors and friends enslaved but also puts those records in conversation with his depictions of Black characters in <em>The Sketch Book</em> and elsewhere, identifying likely real-life models for many, including the itinerant musician at Baltus Van Tassel's party in \"The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.\" In doing so, Bradley shows how in his sketches Irving unintentionally provides a map to an enslaved community that, though constantly subject to violence and uncertainty, was nevertheless vibrant, multigenerational, and connected to African cultures. She also identifies in Irving's writing...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":44043,"journal":{"name":"EARLY AMERICAN LITERATURE","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-08-07","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Rip Van Winkle's Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory ed. by Andrew Burstein and Nancy Isenberg (review)\",\"authors\":\"Leila Mansouri\",\"doi\":\"10.1353/eal.2024.a934215\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>Rip Van Winkle's Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory</em> ed. by Andrew Burstein and Nancy Isenberg <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Leila Mansouri (bio) </li> </ul> <em>Rip Van Winkle's Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory</em><br/> <small>andrew burstein</small> and <small>nancy isenberg</small>, <small>editors</small><br/> Louisiana State University Press, 2022<br/> 214 pp. <p>Edited by historians Andrew Burstein and Nancy Isenberg, <em>Rip Van Winkle's Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory</em> marks the bicentennial of the 1819 publication of <em>The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent</em>. with an interdisciplinary collection of essays that engage both the historical Irving and his writing's continued multifaceted resonance with American audiences. The volume is an outgrowth of a canceled 2020 symposium that had been set to be held at Historic Hudson Valley, a nonprofit that promotes and seeks to educate the public on Hudson Valley historic landmarks. It includes work not only from academic historians and literary scholars but also from two members of Historic Hudson Valley's staff, the principal historian of a Westchester County public history project focused on the Revolutionary War, and Hollywood actor and screenwriter Curtis Armstrong, who has sought to adapt Irving's work. These contributors collectively stake out a conversation that bridges what usually is a sharp divide between scholarship on the early American period and the reception of early American authors in popular culture and present-day public events. In doing so, their essays offer a set of trenchant but contradictory answers to the question that animates the collection's preface: Why does Washing-ton Irving still matter?</p> <p>Readers of <em>Early American Literature</em> likely take one of those answers for granted: Irving matters because his writings still offer scholars productive entry into key aspects of early US literature and society. <em>Rip Van Winkle's Republic</em> presents a number of fresh and compelling readings of <em>The Sketch Book</em>—including of its two most famous stories, \\\"Rip Van Winkle\\\" and \\\"The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.\\\" Two standouts among these are Michelle Sizemore's \\\"Rites and Times of the Grand Tour\\\" and Elizabeth L. Bradley's \\\"Tracing Northern Slavery in the Knickerbocker Stories.\\\" In the former, Sizemore situates <em>The Sketch Book</em>, which Irving composed during an extended trip to Europe, in relation to the rise of the Grand Tour, which in the wake of the American Revolution became a rite of passage for white, <strong>[End Page 495]</strong> well-off young American men seeking to connect with what they saw as their cultural and civilizational forebears. Attending especially to <em>The Sketch Book</em>'s depictions of England, Sizemore argues that through them Geoffrey Crayon, <em>The Sketch Book</em>'s fictional narrator, invokes and distills a raced and classed <em>Anglo</em>-American identity that positions the United States as Britain's imperial heir and Grand Touring literary pilgrims such as himself as the new American empire's natural leaders. In doing so, she deftly denaturalizes the Americanness of Irving's literary nationalism, suggesting that it was an ethnically English American identity constituted through real and imaginative travel to Britain that produced early US imperial consciousness and enabled <em>The Sketch Book</em> to envisage an imperial US frontier from which Native Americans naturally vanish.</p> <p>Bradley, who is currently vice president of programs and engagement at Historic Hudson Valley, focuses instead on an aspect of Irving's life in New York City and the Hudson Valley that receives relatively little attention in his prose: slavery in New York State. As Bradley notes, long after New York passed a law that gradually abolished slavery, interactions with enslaved New Yorkers remained a fact of daily life in Irving's world. Her essay not only brings to light archival records that suggest Irving routinely encountered those his neighbors and friends enslaved but also puts those records in conversation with his depictions of Black characters in <em>The Sketch Book</em> and elsewhere, identifying likely real-life models for many, including the itinerant musician at Baltus Van Tassel's party in \\\"The Legend of Sleepy Hollow.\\\" In doing so, Bradley shows how in his sketches Irving unintentionally provides a map to an enslaved community that, though constantly subject to violence and uncertainty, was nevertheless vibrant, multigenerational, and connected to African cultures. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: Rip Van Winkle's Republic:Andrew Burstein 和 Nancy Isenberg 编辑 Leila Mansouri (bio) Rip Van Winkle's Republic:路易斯安那州立大学出版社,2022 年,214 页。由历史学家安德鲁-伯斯坦和南希-伊森伯格编辑的《瑞普-凡-温克尔的共和国》:历史与记忆中的华盛顿-欧文》以跨学科论文集的形式纪念了《杰弗里-克雷翁的素描书》1819 年出版二百周年,既涉及历史上的欧文,也涉及他的作品在美国读者中持续产生的多方面共鸣。这本文集是取消 2020 年在哈德逊河谷历史博物馆(Historic Hudson Valley)举行的研讨会的产物,哈德逊河谷历史博物馆是一家非营利性机构,致力于向公众宣传哈德逊河谷的历史地标。该书不仅收录了学术历史学家和文学家的作品,还收录了哈德逊河谷历史博物馆的两位工作人员、韦斯特切斯特郡一个以革命战争为主题的公共历史项目的主要历史学家,以及试图改编欧文作品的好莱坞演员兼编剧柯蒂斯-阿姆斯特朗(Curtis Armstrong)的作品。这些撰稿人共同发起了一场对话,弥合了美国早期学术研究与大众文化和当今公共活动对美国早期作家的接受之间通常存在的巨大鸿沟。在此过程中,他们的文章对本集序言中提出的问题做出了一系列尖锐而又矛盾的回答:为什么华盛顿-欧文仍然重要?早期美国文学》的读者很可能认为其中一个答案是理所当然的:欧文之所以重要,是因为他的著作仍然是学者们了解美国早期文学和社会关键方面的有效入口。瑞普-凡-温克尔的共和国》一书对《素描书》--包括其中最著名的两篇故事《瑞普-凡-温克尔》和《沉睡谷的传说》--进行了大量新鲜而引人入胜的解读。其中最突出的两篇是米歇尔-西泽莫尔(Michelle Sizemore)的 "Rites and Times of the Grand Tour "和伊丽莎白-布拉德利(Elizabeth L. Bradley)的 "Tracing Northern Slavery in the Knickerbocker Stories"。在前者中,Sizemore 将欧文在一次欧洲长途旅行中创作的《素描集》与 "大旅行 "的兴起联系起来,"大旅行 "在美国革命之后成为美国白人富裕青年的一种成年礼 [第495页完] ,他们寻求与他们眼中的文化和文明先辈建立联系。西泽摩尔特别关注《素描本》中对英国的描写,她认为,《素描本》的虚构叙述者杰弗里-克雷翁通过这些描写唤起并提炼了一种种族和阶级的英美身份,这种身份将美国定位为英国的帝国继承人,而像他这样的 "大旅行 "文学朝圣者则是新美利坚帝国的天然领袖。在此过程中,她巧妙地将欧文文学民族主义中的美国性非自然化,指出正是通过真实的和想象中的英国之旅所构成的英裔美国人身份产生了早期的美国帝国意识,并使《素描本》设想了一个美国帝国边疆,而美洲原住民则自然而然地消失了。布拉德利现任哈德逊河谷历史博物馆负责项目和参与的副总裁,他将重点放在欧文在纽约市和哈德逊河谷生活的一个方面,而在他的散文中,这个方面受到的关注相对较少:纽约州的奴隶制。正如布拉德利所指出的那样,在纽约通过法律逐步废除奴隶制之后的很长一段时间里,在欧文的世界里,与受奴役的纽约人的交往仍然是日常生活中的事实。她的文章不仅揭示了档案记录,表明欧文经常遇到他的邻居和朋友中受奴役的人,而且还将这些记录与他在《素描集》和其他作品中对黑人人物的描写结合起来,为许多黑人人物确定了可能的现实生活原型,其中包括《沉睡谷的传说》中参加巴尔图斯-范-塔塞尔(Baltus Van Tassel)聚会的流动音乐家。在此过程中,布拉德利展示了欧文如何在他的素描中无意间提供了一张通往被奴役社区的地图,这个社区虽然经常遭受暴力和不确定性,但仍然充满活力、多代同堂,并与非洲文化紧密相连。她还从欧文的写作中发现了...
Rip Van Winkle's Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory ed. by Andrew Burstein and Nancy Isenberg (review)
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Reviewed by:
Rip Van Winkle's Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory ed. by Andrew Burstein and Nancy Isenberg
Leila Mansouri (bio)
Rip Van Winkle's Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory andrew burstein and nancy isenberg, editors Louisiana State University Press, 2022 214 pp.
Edited by historians Andrew Burstein and Nancy Isenberg, Rip Van Winkle's Republic: Washington Irving in History and Memory marks the bicentennial of the 1819 publication of The Sketch Book of Geoffrey Crayon, Gent. with an interdisciplinary collection of essays that engage both the historical Irving and his writing's continued multifaceted resonance with American audiences. The volume is an outgrowth of a canceled 2020 symposium that had been set to be held at Historic Hudson Valley, a nonprofit that promotes and seeks to educate the public on Hudson Valley historic landmarks. It includes work not only from academic historians and literary scholars but also from two members of Historic Hudson Valley's staff, the principal historian of a Westchester County public history project focused on the Revolutionary War, and Hollywood actor and screenwriter Curtis Armstrong, who has sought to adapt Irving's work. These contributors collectively stake out a conversation that bridges what usually is a sharp divide between scholarship on the early American period and the reception of early American authors in popular culture and present-day public events. In doing so, their essays offer a set of trenchant but contradictory answers to the question that animates the collection's preface: Why does Washing-ton Irving still matter?
Readers of Early American Literature likely take one of those answers for granted: Irving matters because his writings still offer scholars productive entry into key aspects of early US literature and society. Rip Van Winkle's Republic presents a number of fresh and compelling readings of The Sketch Book—including of its two most famous stories, "Rip Van Winkle" and "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow." Two standouts among these are Michelle Sizemore's "Rites and Times of the Grand Tour" and Elizabeth L. Bradley's "Tracing Northern Slavery in the Knickerbocker Stories." In the former, Sizemore situates The Sketch Book, which Irving composed during an extended trip to Europe, in relation to the rise of the Grand Tour, which in the wake of the American Revolution became a rite of passage for white, [End Page 495] well-off young American men seeking to connect with what they saw as their cultural and civilizational forebears. Attending especially to The Sketch Book's depictions of England, Sizemore argues that through them Geoffrey Crayon, The Sketch Book's fictional narrator, invokes and distills a raced and classed Anglo-American identity that positions the United States as Britain's imperial heir and Grand Touring literary pilgrims such as himself as the new American empire's natural leaders. In doing so, she deftly denaturalizes the Americanness of Irving's literary nationalism, suggesting that it was an ethnically English American identity constituted through real and imaginative travel to Britain that produced early US imperial consciousness and enabled The Sketch Book to envisage an imperial US frontier from which Native Americans naturally vanish.
Bradley, who is currently vice president of programs and engagement at Historic Hudson Valley, focuses instead on an aspect of Irving's life in New York City and the Hudson Valley that receives relatively little attention in his prose: slavery in New York State. As Bradley notes, long after New York passed a law that gradually abolished slavery, interactions with enslaved New Yorkers remained a fact of daily life in Irving's world. Her essay not only brings to light archival records that suggest Irving routinely encountered those his neighbors and friends enslaved but also puts those records in conversation with his depictions of Black characters in The Sketch Book and elsewhere, identifying likely real-life models for many, including the itinerant musician at Baltus Van Tassel's party in "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow." In doing so, Bradley shows how in his sketches Irving unintentionally provides a map to an enslaved community that, though constantly subject to violence and uncertainty, was nevertheless vibrant, multigenerational, and connected to African cultures. She also identifies in Irving's writing...