Mapping American Culture
“This book is a timely and welcome addition to the literature on place and American culture.”—Geographical Review
“Mapping American Culture is a useful contribution to [the] ongoing discovery of America in all the diversity of its people and places.”—Journal of American History
“Publishing papers from an interdisciplinary conference in book form is always a gamble. Too often the resulting essays are disparate, uneven, and seem merely forced together in an unhappy proximity which is merely adventitious. However, when the gamble works, the results can be exceptionally fruitful and exhilarating. This volume is a successful case in point. Franklin and Steiner's collection of essays written by geographers, art and literary critics …constitutes a fine and wide-ranging introduction to recent, promising developments in American cultural geography. The standards of writing, engagement, and insight in the collection are uniformly high.”—Journal of American Studies
What connections can be drawn between oral history and the shopping mall? Gospel music and the Diablo Canyon nuclear power plant? William Carlos Williams's Patterson and the Manhattan Project's secret cities? The answers lie in this insightful collection of essays that read and illuminate the American landscape. Through literature and folklore, music and oral history, autobiography, architecture, and photography, eleven leading writers and thinkers explore the dialectic between space and place in modern American life. The result is an eloquent and provocative reminder of the environmental context of events—the deceptively simple fact that events “take place.”
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction: Taking Place: Toward the Regrounding of American Studies -Wayne Franklin and Michael Steiner
Place and Culture: A Theoretical Perspective
Place and Culture: Analeptic for Individuality and the World’s Indifference -Yi-Fu Tuan
Cultures: Migration, Place, and Placelessness in America
Place-on-the-Move: Space and Place for the Migrant -Clarence Mondale
“To Lose the Unspeakable”: Folklore and Landscape in O.E. Rolvaag’s Giants in the Earth -April Schultz
Back Home: Southern Identity and African-American Gospel Quartet Performance -Ray Allen
Texts: Language and the Making of American Place
Thoreau’s Journal: The Creation of a Sacred Place -Don Scheese
Possessing America: William Carlos William’s Paterson and the Poetics of Appropriation -Kinereth Meyer
“Roots, Aren’t They Supposed to Be Buried?”: The Experience of Place in Midwestern Women’s; -Kathleen R. Wallace
Topographies: The Built Environment and Modern American Culture
Beyond the Sacred and the Profane: Cultural Landscape Photography in America, 1930-1990 -Timothy Davis
The Formal Garden in the Age of Consumer Culture: A Reading of the Twentieth-Century Shopping -Richard Keller Simon
Topographies of Power: The Forced Shapes of the Manhattan Project -Peter Bacon Hales
Priesthoods and Power: Some Thoughts on Diablo Canyon -Steven Marx
Notes on Contributors
Index