Securing the Commonwealth: Debt, Speculation, and Writing in the Making of Early America

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JHU Press, 2005 - 218 páginas

Securing the Commonwealth examines how eighteenth-century American writers understood the highly speculative financial times in which they lived. Spanning a century of cultural and literary life, this study shows how the era's literature commonly depicted an American ethos of risk taking and borrowing as the peculiar product of New World daring and the exigencies of revolution and nation building.

Some of the century's most important writers, including Cotton Mather, Benjamin Franklin, Royall Tyler, Charles Brockden Brown, and Judith Sargent Murray, believed that economic and social commonwealth—and one's commitment to that commonwealth—might be grounded in indebtedness and financial insecurity. These writers believed a cash-poor colony or nation could not only advance itself through borrowing but also gain reputability each time it successfully paid off a loan. Equally important, they believed that debt could promote communality: precarious public credit structures could exact popular commitment; intricate financial networks could bind individuals to others and to their government; and indebtedness itself could evoke sympathy for the suffering of others.

Close readings of their literary works reveal how these writers imagined that public life might be shaped by economic experience, and how they understood the public life of literature itself. Insecure times strengthened their conviction that writing could be publicly serviceable, persuading readers to invest in their government, in their fellow Americans, and in the idea of America itself.

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Contenido

Castle Building
1
New World Ventures
19
Crisis and Faith in the Puritan Society
27
Making Much of Nothing in the Chesapeake
43
The Price of Independence
63
Benjamin Franklins Projections
71
Performing Redemption on the National Stage
96
Bonds of the New Nation
113
Arthur Mervyn and the Readers Investments
119
The Medium between Calculation and Feeling
137
Headwork Literary Vocation
157
Notes
169
Bibliography
193
Index
209
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Jennifer J. Baker is an assistant professor of English at New York University.

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