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Print Technology in Scotland and America, 1740-1800

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In Print Technology in Scotland and America Louis Kirk McAuley investigates the mediation of popular-political culture in Scotland and America, from the transatlantic religious revivals known as the Great Awakening to the U.S. presidential election of 1800. By focusing on Scotland and America-and, in particular, the tension between unity and fragmentation that characterizes eighteenth-century Scottish and American literature and culture-Print Technology aims to increase our understanding of how tensions within these corresponding political and cultural arenas altered the meaning of print as an instrument of empire and nation building. McAuley reveals how seemingly disparate events, including journalism and literary forgery, were instrumental and innovative deployments of print not as a liberation technology (as Habermas's analysis of print's structural transformation of the public sphere suggests), but as a mediator of political tensions.
Louis Kirk McAuley is assistant professor of English at Washington State University.
Contents List of Illustrations Acknowledgments Introduction Chapter One: Noise (and Noise Abatement) in Scotland and America Chapter Two: To "Bring Forward a General Scream": George Whitefield, Mob Rules, and the Noise of Religious Enthusiasm Chapter Three: The "Torrent's Roar": Agricultural Improvement, Colonial Administration, and the Reorganization of Noise in James Macpherson's The Poems of Ossian Chapter Four: Creating a "Perfect Union of Opinion": The Polygraph, Thomas Jefferson, and the Presidential Election of 1800 Chapter Five: "Periodical Visitations": Crises of Representation in Charles Brockden Brown's Arthur Mervyn Bibliography About the Author Index
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