About this item
Highlights
- The Fourth of July, Thanksgiving, Washington's Birthday, Memorial Day, Columbus Day, Labor Day, Martin Luther King's Birthday, and other celebrations matter to Americans and reflect the state of American local and national politics.
- About the Author: Matthew Dennis is Professor of History at the University of Oregon.
- 352 Pages
- History, Social History
Description
About the Book
The Fourth of July, Thanksgiving, Washington's Birthday, Memorial Day, Columbus Day, Labor Day, Martin Luther King's Birthday, and other celebrations matter to Americans and reflect the state of American local and national politics. Commemorations of...
Book Synopsis
The Fourth of July, Thanksgiving, Washington's Birthday, Memorial Day, Columbus Day, Labor Day, Martin Luther King's Birthday, and other celebrations matter to Americans and reflect the state of American local and national politics. Commemorations of cataclysmic events and light, apparently trivial observances mirror American political and cultural life. Both reveal much about the material conditions of the United States and its citizens' identities, historical consciousness, and political attitudes. Lying dormant within these festivals is the potential for political consequence, controversy, even transformation. American political fetes remain works in progress, as Americans use historical celebrations as occasions to reinvent themselves and their nation, often with surprising results. In six engaging chapters 'assaying particular political holidays over the course of their histories, Red, White, and Blue Letter Days examines how Americans have shaped and been shaped by their calendar.
Matthew Dennis explores this vast political and cultural terrain, charting how Americans defined their identities through celebration. Independence Day invited African Americans to demand the equality promised in the Declaration of Independence, for example, just as Columbus Day--celebrating the Italian, Catholic explorer--helped immigrants proclaim their legitimacy as Americans. Native Americans too could use public holidays, such as Thanksgiving or Veterans Day, to express dissent or demonstrate their claims to citizenship. Merchants and advertisers colonized the American calendar, moving in to sell their products by linking them, often tenuously, with holiday occasions or casting consumption as a patriotic act.
Review Quotes
Dennis explores how various US ethnic groups have identified with Independence Day, Thanksgiving, Columbus Day, Presidents' Day, Labor Day, Memorial Day, and Martin Luther King's birthday to express their particular group's distinctiveness.... Distinguished by good writing and extensive research, the resulting book is an informative, readable history that goes beyond mere synthesis to demonstrate relationships between rival partisan causes. Summing Up: Recommended.
-- "Choice"Dennis has produced a valuable contribution to the recent scholarship on festive culture, holidays, and the creation of identity in the United States, and his book should join works by David Waldstriecher, Leigh Schmidt, Mary Ryan, and Len Travers as a standard work in the field.
-- "American Studies"Dennis reminds readers of the urgent issues at stake when these special times were singled out for inclusion in the American book of days.... Each of the holidays addressed has a history as complex and fraught as the design of the American flag.
-- "American Historical Review"In Red, White, and Blue Letter Days: An American Calendar, Dennis exhibits an outstanding array of American historical background and weaves a complex tapestry of analysis that will appeal to general readers and scholars as well. It is a well-written and ambitious work and would be most appropriate for American culture and American studies courses.
-- "History: Reviews of New Books"This engaging study deconstructs public commemorations in the United States from the mid-1700s to the present.... His thought-provoking and insightful book should inspire a closer examination of the subject by other scholars.
-- "Virginia Quarterly Review"Unlike other holiday histories, this one closely addresses the racial, sexual, regional, and sectional differences in perspective that marked and sometimes marred public celebrations.... It's fascinating to read Dennis's account of the controversy surrounding the early celebration of Washington's Birthday, which was regarded by some as an antirepublican cult of personality.
-- "College and Research Library News"About the Author
Matthew Dennis is Professor of History at the University of Oregon. He is the author of the prize-winning book Cultivating a Landscape of Peace: Iroquois-European Encounters in Seventeenth-Century America, also from Cornell, and coeditor of Riot and Revelry in Early America.