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Sentimental Democracy: The Evolution of America's Romantic Self-Image by Andrew Burstein β€” book cover

Sentimental Democracy: The Evolution of America's Romantic Self-Image

by Andrew Burstein
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Overview

The provocative interpretation of American political rhetoric

Americans like to use words of sentiment and sympathy, passion and power, to explain their democracy. In a provocative new work, Andrew Burstein examines the metaphorically rich language which Americans developed to express their guiding principle: that the New World would improve upon the Old. In journals, letters, speeches, and books, an impassioned rhetoric of "feeling" set the tone for American patriotism.

Burstein shows how the eighteenth century "culture of sensibility" encouraged optimism about a global society: the new nation would succeed. Americans believed, as much by sublime feeling as by intellectual achievement or political liberty. As they grew more self-confident, this pacific ideal acquired teeth: noble Washington and humane Jefferson yielded to boisterous Jackson, and the language of gentle feeling to the force of Manifest Destiny. Yet Americans never stopped celebrating what they believed was their innate impulse to do good.

Synopsis

The provocative interpretation of American political rhetoric

Americans like to use words of sentiment and sympathy, passion and power, to explain their democracy. In a provocative new work, Andrew Burstein examines the metaphorically rich language which Americans developed to express their guiding principle: that the New World would improve upon the Old. In journals, letters, speeches, and books, an impassioned rhetoric of "feeling" set the tone for American patriotism.

Burstein shows how the eighteenth century "culture of sensibility" encouraged optimism about a global society: the new nation would succeed. Americans believed, as much by sublime feeling as by intellectual achievement or political liberty. As they grew more self-confident, this pacific ideal acquired teeth: noble Washington and humane Jefferson yielded to boisterous Jackson, and the language of gentle feeling to the force of Manifest Destiny. Yet Americans never stopped celebrating what they believed was their innate impulse to do good.

Kyle Copas

The last best hope, Manifest Destiny, Pax Americana -- the terms have changed over the course of more than two centuries, but as Andrew Burstein's new book, Sentimental Democracy, makes clear, the American self-righteousness they stand for has altered little since colonial times. By tracing the emotional wellsprings of the Founders to the 18th century culture of sensibility, and then charting the next few generations' efforts to adapt their language of feeling to changing circumstances, Sentimental Democracy offers new insights into how American exceptionalism -- the idea of the United States as the chosen land, the new Israel -- came to be the rule.

In his previous book, The Inner Jefferson, Burstein explored Thomas Jefferson's emotional life by explicating his private views on nature, friendship and sympathy. In Sentimental Democracy Burstein broadens his focus, examining a wide range of material -- sermons, orations, pamphlets, editorials, correspondence -- in order to map the shifts in American political discourse from the time of the Stamp Act to the presidential election of 1828. Tracing the sources of colonial beliefs about thought and behavior to Locke's "Essay upon Human Understanding," the philosophical writings of the Scottish moralists and literary works by Samuel Richardson, Laurence Sterne and the now-forgotten Henry Mackenzie, Burstein deftly describes an environment in which the desire for moral refinement led to the cultivation of a stirring and intensely emotional language of dissent in the face of "unfeeling" Parliamentary repression.

With the American victory at Yorktown, the newly liberated citizenry sought fresh challenges to reconfirm its republican purity and virtue. But the rise of factionalism in the 1790s and a growing argument as to the true relationship between the good of the nation and enlightened self-interest strained the linguistic consensus. The Founders' happy balance of sentiment and reason was soon relegated to the status of myth -- witness Parson Weems' 1800 hagiography of George Washington. Westward expansion, the War of 1812, the contentious debate leading to the Missouri Compromise -- each of these developments required an assertiveness at odds with the language of feeling. Burstein marks the election of the populist Andrew Jackson as the final triumph of the Man of Action over the Man of Feeling, whose hypersensitivity and weepy outpourings of sympathy had come to seem mawkish and stereotyped.

Burstein's documentary method permits occasional glimpses of the withering ironies that the country's moral self-absorption has engendered. The frequent rhetorical opposition of "liberty" and "slavery" in the colonial and early federal periods, the simultaneous praise of and destruction of Native American tribes -- these paradoxes seem to have passed unnoticed. But that's no surprise, given the compelling evidence Burstein offers in Sentimental Democracy that America was (and remains) staunchly self-centered in its conviction of its virtue and its integrity. -- Salon

About the Author, Andrew Burstein

Andrew Burstein is the author of The Inner Jefferson: Portrait of a Grieving Optimist. He teaches at the University of Northern Iowa.

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Editorials

Kyle Copas

The last best hope, Manifest Destiny, Pax Americana -- the terms have changed over the course of more than two centuries, but as Andrew Burstein's new book, Sentimental Democracy, makes clear, the American self-righteousness they stand for has altered little since colonial times. By tracing the emotional wellsprings of the Founders to the 18th century culture of sensibility, and then charting the next few generations' efforts to adapt their language of feeling to changing circumstances, Sentimental Democracy offers new insights into how American exceptionalism -- the idea of the United States as the chosen land, the new Israel -- came to be the rule.

In his previous book, The Inner Jefferson, Burstein explored Thomas Jefferson's emotional life by explicating his private views on nature, friendship and sympathy. In Sentimental Democracy Burstein broadens his focus, examining a wide range of material -- sermons, orations, pamphlets, editorials, correspondence -- in order to map the shifts in American political discourse from the time of the Stamp Act to the presidential election of 1828. Tracing the sources of colonial beliefs about thought and behavior to Locke's "Essay upon Human Understanding," the philosophical writings of the Scottish moralists and literary works by Samuel Richardson, Laurence Sterne and the now-forgotten Henry Mackenzie, Burstein deftly describes an environment in which the desire for moral refinement led to the cultivation of a stirring and intensely emotional language of dissent in the face of "unfeeling" Parliamentary repression.

With the American victory at Yorktown, the newly liberated citizenry sought fresh challenges to reconfirm its republican purity and virtue. But the rise of factionalism in the 1790s and a growing argument as to the true relationship between the good of the nation and enlightened self-interest strained the linguistic consensus. The Founders' happy balance of sentiment and reason was soon relegated to the status of myth -- witness Parson Weems' 1800 hagiography of George Washington. Westward expansion, the War of 1812, the contentious debate leading to the Missouri Compromise -- each of these developments required an assertiveness at odds with the language of feeling. Burstein marks the election of the populist Andrew Jackson as the final triumph of the Man of Action over the Man of Feeling, whose hypersensitivity and weepy outpourings of sympathy had come to seem mawkish and stereotyped.

Burstein's documentary method permits occasional glimpses of the withering ironies that the country's moral self-absorption has engendered. The frequent rhetorical opposition of "liberty" and "slavery" in the colonial and early federal periods, the simultaneous praise of and destruction of Native American tribes -- these paradoxes seem to have passed unnoticed. But that's no surprise, given the compelling evidence Burstein offers in Sentimental Democracy that America was (and remains) staunchly self-centered in its conviction of its virtue and its integrity. -- Salon

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

As the season of impeachment subsides and the campaign season looms on the horizon, readers with an interest in American political expression would do well to turn to Burstein (The Inner Jefferson). The American Revolution, he writes, would have failed without the "language of feeling" that was used to articulate the Enlightenment ideal of a just society. He goes on to cite great examples of American expression, from the sublime phrasings of the Declaration of Independence, which combined "masculine sentiment and a kind of theater," to Patrick Henry's impassioned cry, "Give me liberty or give me death!" As America grew more powerful, however, the voices of the noble Washington and the humane Jefferson were supplanted by that of the pugnacious Andrew Jackson (who, writes Burstein, "seemed to enjoy killing"). A rarity among academic writers, Burstein minimizes his own rhetoric and instead uses a rich panoply of original sources that give every page a rich texture and render the whole stirring and convincing. Though the book focuses on the first decades after the Revolution, Burstein does discuss the relation of 18th-century political rhetoric to the contemporary variety. Accessible and insightful, Burstein's book explicates and vivifies the discourse of democracy.

Library Journal

Given Bursteins expertise regarding the Founding Father whose stirring words and political views did so much to shape Americas self-image, the topic of his newest book is a natural one. Previously, historians have traced the American sense of exceptionalism to a variety of sources: the Puritan ideal of a City on a Hill, George Washingtons warnings against entangling alliances, and the belief that Americans were a chosen people. Adding to these, Burstein (history, Univ. of Northern Iowa; The Inner Jefferson: Portrait of a Grieving Optimist, Univ. of Virginia, 1995) now adds the claim that the 18th centurys cult of sensibility (as exemplified in the sentimental fiction of Laurence Sterne and Samuel Richardson) had a lasting impact in America, contributing to a particularly emotional brand of patriotism and strong feelings of benevolence and generosity. Burstein shows that this pacific compassion could evolve into policies that might seem anything but gentle. Bursteins book sometimes shows signs of strain as it tries to demonstrate that sentiment was the all-pervasive root of the major traits in the American character. However, one must credit Burstein with producing a book that is stimulating, well researched, and relevant to todays debates about the nature of the American character and the role of the United States in world affairs.Thomas J. Schaeper, St. Bonaventure Univ., NY

Booknews

Examines the emotional dynamic and the metaphorically rich language which Americans developed to express their guiding principle: that the New World would improve upon the Old. Draws on newspapers, private letters, speeches, and diaries to show how the 18th-century "culture of sensibility" encouraged early Americans to make a heartfelt commitment to the Enlightenment's optimism about a global society. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknew.com)

Kirkus Reviews

A scholarly, exhaustively detailed account of how America's founding generation used the "language of sentiment" to establish a benevolent, romantic self-image for the new nation. Historian Burstein (Univ. of Northern Iowa) has compiled evidence from letters, speeches, newspapers, poems, and popular literature to illustrate 18th-century America's "concern with the workings of the human heart," a concern that helped shape the founders and their nationalist ideology. Through the use of sentimental language, the revolutionary generation created a sort of secular religion envisioning America as a divinely ordained Eden whose example would liberate the world from tyranny. Burstein parses this sentimental language, citing the impassioned words of Jefferson, Crèvecoeur, Paine, and others. With a profound understanding of the moral and intellectual climate of the Revolutionary era, Burstein describes the evolving mythology of the young nation. Washington was transformed into a symbol of republican virtue, a selfless Cincinnatus forsaking his plow to defend his country. The "spirit of '76" stressed a love of liberty that compelled total self-sacrifice. As postwar factionalism and economic instability rose, the rhetoric of moral crisis returned. Federalists increasingly bemoaned the "unbridled passions" of the multitudes, fearing a descent into Hobbesian mob rule. Hence, they proposed constitutional checks and balances to channel public sentiment. Jefferson, Burstein's quintessential Man of Feeling, feared this centralization of power as a smokescreen for aristocracy; he revered the simpler, agrarian virtues, worshiped Nature, and trusted in resilient individualism. While the Jacksonian eraseemed to embody Jefferson's idyllic vision, it also promoted concepts of acquisitiveness and aggression. As the 19th century advanced, Burstein notes, the seemingly contradictory concepts of sentiment and power were merged into a national ideology of benevolent aggression, whereby power was wielded for paternalistic or "civilizing" motives. Burstein wisely admits that the nation hasn't always lived up to its romantic self-image, especially in its treatment of slaves and Native Americans. A welcome addition to the literature exploring American history's ideological underpinnings.

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2000
Publisher
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Pages
432
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780809085361

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