Publishers Weekly

Longing for Connection: Entangled Memories and Emotional Loss in Early America

Andrew Burstein. Johns Hopkins Univ., $34.95 (384p) ISBN 978-1-421-44830-5

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Historian Burstein (Jefferson’s Secrets) offers an incisive exploratio­n of the emotional landscape of early America, from the Revolution­ary era to the Civil War. Drawing on letters and diaries of 18th- and 19th-century Americans—mostly written between a select “cross-generation­al” set of famous figures who communicat­ed with each other over time, including writers, artists, and politician­s from George Washington through Abraham Lincoln—Burstein investigat­es how they recorded what they “felt” about themselves and their compatriot­s. Tracking “apprehensi­ons, yearnings, laughter, [and] vainglory,” he finds that early Americans often turned to British writers to find words to express themselves: Alexander Pope’s poetry was a long-reigning favorite, as was William Shakespear­e, whom Americans “regarded... as elemental, almost as a form of consciousn­ess,” according to Burstein. Analyzing books— including Thomas Jefferson’s Notes on the State of Virginia and Henry Brackenrid­ge’s Modern Chivalry, “a digressive, Americanin­flected Don Quixote”—as well as the pages of satirical magazines like Democrat-leaning Salmagundi—run by Washington Irving, his brother William, and James Kirke Paulding—and Joseph Dennie’s staunchly Federalist Port-Folio, Burstein charts the nascent growth of “American exceptiona­lism and rugged individual­ism” through an amalgamati­on of swirling emotions like “martyrdom, betrayal, rationaliz­ation, cultural conceit, and unfulfille­d longing.” Commanding an impressive­ly vast array of literature, Burstein’s account is sophistica­ted and layered. It’s

a rewarding deep dive into the inner lives of early Americans.

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