移民大西洋中的门槛州,1789-1857

Edward H. Sugden
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引用次数: 0

摘要

这一章将美国和美洲置于世界危机时代的大西洋革命之后,但在实现真正的民主之前。在这样定位时,它认为,在19世纪上半叶,美国和美洲既不是一个旧的世界,也不是一个新的世界,而是两者的某种混合体。激进移民的形象象征着这种门槛状态。这些移民发现美国是一个即将转变为一个完全实现的民主社会政体的地区,但还没有完全实现。因此,他们创造了一种公民权的形式,寓言化了这种中间状态——“活死人”——这反映了他们介于主体和国家民主公民之间的感觉。这是德裔美国人的工作——“移民哥特式”——包括赫尔曼·梅尔维尔(Herman Melville)的《皮埃尔》(Pierre)等经典小说、德语城市推理小说和反动的本土主义幻想小说,想象激进移民所期望的被救赎的社会世界可能是什么样子。尽管这些小说发现,想象世界末日相对容易,但事实证明,一个完全得到救赎的民主是难以捉摸的。相反,他们开始思考小说带来激进历史变革的有限能力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Threshold States in the Immigrant Atlantic, 1789–1857
This chapter places the US Americas in the zone after the Atlantic revolutions of the era of world crisis but before the realization of a true democracy. In positioning them as such, it argues that in the first half of the nineteenth century the US Americas were neither an old nor a new world but some intermixture of the two. The figure of the radical immigrant emblematized this threshold state. These immigrants found the US Americas to be a zone that was on the verge of transformation into a fully realized democratic social polity but not quite there yet. As such, they created a formulation of citizenship that allegorized this midstate—“living death”—that reflected their sense of being between a subject and national, democratic citizen. It was the job of a German American genre—the “immigrant gothic”—involving canonical fiction like Herman Melville’s Pierre, German-language city mysteries, and reactionary nativist fantasias, to imagine what the redeemed social world desired by immigrant radicals might look like. Although these fictions found it comparatively easy to imagine the apocalypse, a completely redeemed democracy proved elusive. Instead, they came to dwell on the limited capacity of fiction to bring about radical historical transformation.
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