Performing Political Persuasion in the United States in the Early Years of the Republic

IF 0.3 Q4 CULTURAL STUDIES
Tomáš Kačer
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Theater productions were born out of a paradox in the United States of the Revolutionary War and shortly afterwards. While the nation’s dominant ideology was anti-theatrical, theater often served a nationalist agenda, co-defining the new American nation and its nascent identities – such were, for example, productions of Joseph Addison’s Cato at Valley Forge in 1778 and William Dunlap’s André at the New Park in New York in 1798. These theater events empowered the audience to publicly perform their national identity as Americans and exercise their republican fervor. Similarly, a production of Bunker-Hill by J. D. Burk at the Haymarket in Boston in 1797 was crucial in helping define the social and political identities of its audiences, who were motivated to attend the performances as an expression of their partisan preferences. This article shows that literary, theatrical and social practices served to constitute performatively the early American national identity.
共和初年美国的政治劝导
戏剧作品诞生于美国独立战争及其后不久的一个悖论。虽然美国的主导意识形态是反戏剧的,但戏剧往往是民族主义议程的一部分,共同定义了新的美国国家及其新生的身份——例如,1778年约瑟夫·艾迪生的《福吉谷的卡托》和1798年威廉·邓拉普的《纽约新公园的安德烈》。这些戏剧活动使观众能够公开展示他们作为美国人的民族身份,并发挥他们的共和党热情。同样,J·D·伯克于1797年在波士顿干草市场制作的《Bunker Hill》对帮助确定观众的社会和政治身份至关重要,观众有动机参加演出,以表达他们的党派偏好。这篇文章表明,文学、戏剧和社会实践在表演上构成了早期美国的民族认同。
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来源期刊
Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses
Revista Alicantina de Estudios Ingleses Arts and Humanities-Literature and Literary Theory
CiteScore
0.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
14
审稿时长
28 weeks
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