Land Fever Land Fever

Land Fever

Dispossession and the Frontier Myth

    • $34.99
    • $34.99

Publisher Description

James Marshall's illuminating study of dispossession on the frontier begins with the autobiography of a pioneer who met repeated failure. Writing in his old age, Omar Morse (1824-1901) looked back on the successive loss of three homesteads in mid-nineteenth century Wisconsin and Minnesota. The frontier as Morse encountered it was a place of runaway land speculation, of high railroad freight rates, of mortgage foreclosures, and of political and economic chaos. Stoic and resilient in adversity, Morse nevertheless expressed the anger of those for whom the Jeffersonian ideal of an independent yeomanry proved to be a cruel illusion.

Marshall moves from Morse's narrative to the historical record of the thousands of similarly dispossessed pioneers and to the legacy of their failure. Politically, their anger was expressed in a grassroots movement that led to formation of the Populist party in the 1880s and 1890s. Culturally, dispossession became a theme in their literature, exemplified in Mark Twain's and Charles Dudley Warner's The Gilded Age and in novels by such Realists as Edward Eggleston, Joseph Kirkland, and Hamlin Garland. Land Fever thus presents the underside of disappointment that has long been the great ignored reality of the splendid success myth of the American frontier.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2021
December 14
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
248
Pages
PUBLISHER
The University Press of Kentucky
SELLER
University of Kentucky
SIZE
1.2
MB

More Books Like This

Forgetting and the Forgotten Forgetting and the Forgotten
2022
After the West Was Won After the West Was Won
1989
Sugar Creek Sugar Creek
2017
Llewellyn Castle Llewellyn Castle
2013
Poquosin Poquosin
2014
Hope in Hard Times Hope in Hard Times
2016