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Telegraphies Indigeneity Identity And Nation In Americas Nineteenthcentury Virtual Realm Kay Yandell

  • SKU: BELL-9958800
Telegraphies Indigeneity Identity And Nation In Americas Nineteenthcentury Virtual Realm Kay Yandell
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Telegraphies Indigeneity Identity And Nation In Americas Nineteenthcentury Virtual Realm Kay Yandell instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 15.27 MB
Pages: 224
Author: Kay Yandell
ISBN: 9780190901042, 0190901047
Language: English
Year: 2019

Product desciption

Telegraphies Indigeneity Identity And Nation In Americas Nineteenthcentury Virtual Realm Kay Yandell by Kay Yandell 9780190901042, 0190901047 instant download after payment.

Telegraphiesexplores literatures envisioning the literary, societal, even the perceived metaphysical effects of various cultures' telecommunications technologies, to argue that nineteenth-century Americans tested in the virtual realm new theories of self, place, nation, and god. The book opens by discussing such Native American telecommunications technologies as smoke signals and sign language chains, to challenge common notions that long-distance speech practices emerged only in conjunction with capitalist industrialization. Kay Yandell analyzes the cultural interactions and literary productions that arose as Native telegraphs worked with and against European American telecommunications systems across nineteenth-century America. Into this conversationTelegraphiesintegrates visions of Morse's electromagnetic telegraph, with its claim to speak new, coded words and to send bodiless, textless prose instantly across the miles. Such writers as Frederick Douglass, Walt Whitman, and Ella Cheever Thayer crafted memoirs, poetic odes, and novels that envision how the birth of instantaneous communication across a vast continent forever alters the way Americans speak, write, build community, and conceive of the divine. While some writers celebrated far-speaking technologies as conduits of a metaphysical Manifest Destiny to overspread America's primitive cultures, others revealed how telecommunication could empower previously silenced voices to range free in the disembodied virtual realm, even as bodies remained confined by race, class, gender, disability, age, or geography. Ultimately,Telegraphiesbroadens the way literary scholars conceive of telecommunications technologies while providing a rich understanding of similarities between literatures often considered to have little in common.

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