Young America Monthly Magazine

Young America Monthly Magazine
Title Young America Monthly Magazine PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 160
Release 1858
Genre
ISBN

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Young America

Young America
Title Young America PDF eBook
Author Edward L. Widmer
Publisher Oxford University Press, USA
Pages 305
Release 2000
Genre American literature
ISBN 0195140621

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This fascinating study examines the meteoric career of a vigorous intellectual movement rising out of the Age of Jackson. As Americans argued over their destiny in the decades preceding the Civil War, an outspoken new generation of "ultra-democratic" writers entered the fray, staking out positions on politics, literature, art, and any other territory they could annex. They called themselves Young America--and they proclaimed a "Manifest Destiny" to push back frontiers in every category of achievement. Their swagger found a natural home in New York City, already bursting at the seams and ready to take on the world. Young America's mouthpiece was the Democratic Review, a highly influential magazine funded by the Democratic Party and edited by the brash and charismatic John O'Sullivan. The Review offered a fresh voice in political journalism, and sponsored young writers like Hawthorne and Whitman early in their careers. Melville, too, was influenced by Young America, and provided a running commentary on its many excesses. Despite brilliant promise, the movement fell apart in the 1850s, leaving its original leaders troubled over the darker destiny they had ushered in. Their ambitious generation had failed to rewrite history as promised. Instead, their perpetual agitation helped set the stage for the Civil War. Young America: The Flowering of Democracy in New York City is without question the most complete examination of this captivating and original movement. It also provides the first published biography of its leader, John O'Sullivan, one of America's great rhetoricians. Edward L. Widmer enriches his unique volume by offering a new theory of Manifest Destiny as part of a broader movement of intellectual expansion in nineteenth-century America.

Demorest's Monthly Magazine

Demorest's Monthly Magazine
Title Demorest's Monthly Magazine PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 942
Release 1868
Genre Dressmaking
ISBN

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Demorests' Monthly Magazine

Demorests' Monthly Magazine
Title Demorests' Monthly Magazine PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 178
Release 1866
Genre
ISBN

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Young American's Magazine of Self-improvement

Young American's Magazine of Self-improvement
Title Young American's Magazine of Self-improvement PDF eBook
Author George Washington Light
Publisher
Pages 390
Release 1847
Genre Conduct of life
ISBN

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Young America

Young America
Title Young America PDF eBook
Author Mark Power Smith
Publisher University of Virginia Press
Pages 419
Release 2022-09-22
Genre History
ISBN 0813948541

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The Young Americans were a nationalist movement within the Democratic Party made up of writers and politicians associated with the New York periodical, the Democratic Review. In this revealing book, Mark Power Smith explores the ways in which–in dialogue with its critics–the movement forged contrasting visions of American nationalism in the decades leading up to the Civil War. Frustrated, fifty years after independence, by Britain’s political and cultural influence on the United States, the Young Americans drew on a wide variety of intellectual authorities—in the fields of literature, political science, phrenology and international law—to tie popular sovereignty for white men to the universalist idea of natural rights. The movement supported a noxious program of foreign interventionism, racial segregation, and cultural nationalism. What united these policies was a new view of national allegiance: one that saw democracy and free trade not as political privileges but as natural rights for white men. Despite its national reach, this view of the Union inadvertently turned Northern and Southern states against each other, helping to cultivate the conditions for the Civil War. In the end, the Young America movement was ultimately consumed by the sectional ideologies it had brought into being.

The American Monthly Magazine

The American Monthly Magazine
Title The American Monthly Magazine PDF eBook
Author
Publisher
Pages 1588
Release 1899
Genre United States
ISBN

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