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English 282.301
Cultural Crossings
Christopher Looby profile

MWF 10

Following Evecoeur's famous 1782 question, "What, then, is the America, this new man?," countless cultural critics and historians have attempted to define a singular American character or identity. More recently, many have sought to discard such a unitary conception of Americanness in favor of a multicultural picture of American character, in which the differences among various ethnic, racial, gender, and sexual identities have been foregrounded. Critics of so-called multiculturalism have protested, in turn, that it disunites America by slotting people into separate categories. In this course, we'll enter this ongoing discussion in a particular way: many of the most interesting and compelling works of early American literature describe acts of cultural crossing, the transformation of identity. Can a "white" person actually become an "Indian"? The earliest genre of mass literature in the United States, for instance, was the captivity narrative-the story of a white person captured by Indians and more or less successfully transformed into an Indian. Can a citizen shift into and out of various social identities at will? The *Memoirs of Stephen Burroughs* (1798) told the story of a shady character who variously impersonated a minister, a counterfeiter, a schoolteacher, and a financial agent. Hugh Henry Brackenridge's rollicking *Modern Chivalry* (1792-1815) featured an ignorant Irish immigrant who nevertheless was mistaken for an Indian, a philosopher, and a rare species of bird. Herman Mann's *The =46emale Review* (1797) told of Deborah Sampson, who passed for a man in order to be a soldier in the American Revolution. Can a slave become a free person (and vice versa)? Can a woman become a man? Can an unregenerate sinner become a saint? Why would some black people want to pass for white, and why would some white people choose to "black up"? What does a culture truly believe about identity if it embraces stories and performances of people whose most fundamental identity changes so radically?



updated 2006-11-01
 
 
 
 


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Photo caption: Francis Daniel Pastorius, Beehive manuscript, 1696-1865, Rare Book and Manuscript Library, University of Pennsylvania.
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