Description
Drawing on literary and cultural studies, art and architectural history, political history, religious history, and the histories of archaeology and ethnology, Trafton illuminates anxieties related to race in different manifestations of nineteenth-century American Egyptomania, including the development of American Egyptology, the rise of racialized science, the narrative and literary tradition of the imperialist adventure tale, the cultural politics of the architectural Egyptian Revival, and the dynamics of African American Ethiopianism. He demonstrates how debates over what the United States was and what it could become returned again and again to ancient Egypt. From visions of Cleopatra to the tales of Edgar Allan Poe, from the works of Pauline Hopkins to the construction of the Washington Monument, from the measuring of slaves' skulls to the singing of slave spirituals-claims about and representations of ancient Egypt served as linchpins for discussions about nineteenth-century American racial and national identity.
Explores the relation between nineteenth-century American interest in ancient Egypt in architecture, literature, and science, and the ways Egypt was deployed by advocates for slavery and by African American writers.
About the Author
Scott Trafton is Assistant Professor of English and African American Studies at George Mason University in Fairfax, Virginia.
Reviews
"Egypt Land is an exceptional interdisciplinary study of the centrality of Egyptomania to considerations of race and nation in nineteenth-century America."-Robert S. Levine, author of Martin Delany, Frederick Douglass, and the Politics of Representative Identity
"A magnificent piece of scholarship, Egypt Land does justice to the complexity of the work of nation- and race-making as such work moved circularly along axes of racialized science, ideology, Biblical and political authority, songs, and images, producing social and material effects. In short, the imagining of ancient Egypt was a weapon among an array of agents that both made and resisted, as Scott Trafton puts it, the 'iconography of empire.'"-Wahneema Lubiano, editor of The House That Race Built
"Now that Scott Trafton has taught us the meaning of Egyptomania, we'll all be seeing its register everywhere and feeling astonished that we weren't noticing it before."-Dana D. Nelson, author of National Manhood: Capitalist Citizenship and the Imagined Fraternity of White Men
Book Information
ISBN 9780822333623
Author Scott Trafton
Format Paperback
Page Count 376
Imprint Duke University Press
Publisher Duke University Press
Weight(grams) 513g