Introduction. Origins
—Patrick Spero
PART I. CIVIL WARS: CHALLENGING THE PATRIOTIC NARRATIVE
Chapter 1. War Stories: Remembering and Forgetting the American
Revolution
—Michael A. McDonnell
Chapter 2. The Intimacies of Occupation: Loyalties, Compromise, and
Betrayal in Revolutionary-Era Newport
—Travis Glasson
Chapter 3. Uncommon Cause: The Challenges of Disaffection in
Revolutionary Pennsylvania
—Aaron Sullivan
Chapter 4. Loyalism, Citizenship, American Identity: The Shoemaker
Family
—Kimberly Nath
Chapter 5. "Executioners of Their Friends and Brethren": Naval
Impressment as an Atlantic Civil War
—Denver Brunsman
PART II. WIDER HORIZONS: DECENTERING THE NATIONALISTIC
NARRATIVE
Chapter 6. British Union and American Revolution: Imperial
Authoritye and the Multinational State
—Ned C. Landsman
Chapter 7. Revisiting the Bishop Controversy
—Katherine Carté Engel
Chapter 8. Empire's Vital Extremities: British Africa and the
Coming of the American Revolution
—Bryan Rosenblithe
Chapter 9. The Great Awakening, Presbyterian Education, and the
Mobilization of Power in the Revolutionary Mid- Atlantic
—Mark Boonshoft
PART III. NEW DIRECTIONS
Chapter 10. "This Is the Skin of a Whit[e] Man": Material Memories
of Violence in Sullivan's Campaign
—Zara Anishanslin
Chapter 11. Environmental History and the War of Independence:
Saltpeter and the Continental Army's Shortage of Gunpowder
—David C. Hsiung
Chapter 12. The Problem of Order and the Transfer of Slave Property
in the Revolutionary South
—Matthew Spooner
PART IV. LEGACIES: THE AFTERLIFE OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION
Chapter 13. The United States and the Transformation of
Transatlantic Migration During the Age of Revolution and
Emancipation
—Aaron Spencer Fogleman
Chapter 14. First Partition: The Troubled Origins of the
Mason-Dixon Line
—Edward G. Gray
Chapter 15. The Power to Be Reborn
—David S. Shields
Conclusion. Beyond the Rebirth of the Revolution: Coming to Terms
with Coming of Age
—Michael Zuckerman
Notes
List of Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
The American Revolution Reborn parts company with the American Revolution of our popular imagination and renders it as a time of intense ambiguity and frightening contingency. With an introduction by Spero and a conclusion by Zuckerman, this volume heralds a substantial and revelatory rebirth in the study of the American Revolution.
Patrick Spero is Librarian and Director at the American Philosophical Society Library. He is author of Frontier Country: The Politics of War in Early Pennsylvania, also available from the University of Pennsylvania Press. Michael Zuckerman is Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Pennsylvania.
"The American Revolution Reborn is a mess. This is no criticism! In
fact, by the lights of co-editor Patrick Spero, this is actually
the volume's central aim. Rather than attempting to conjure up a
fresh, grand narrative of revolutionary America, this group of
fifteen contributors provides what Spero calls a 'messy' view of
the revolution that deconstructs longstanding historiographical
pieties. In doing so, the collection brings the lived experiences
of individuals to the fore. Readers will discover an eclectic cast
of characters who ordinarily exist on the periphery of
revolutionary narratives."
*English Historical Review*
"This is the most ambitious state-of-the-field collection published
since the American Revolution's bicentennial. Let's hope it is
successful in charting new directions and arousing fruitful
debates."
*Thomas P. Slaughter, author of Independence: The Tangled Roots
of the American Revolution*
"The American Revolution appears in a fresh new light in this
lively and wide-ranging collection of essays. The authors deftly
explore a diverse and contested revolution rich in ironies and
importance."
*Alan Taylor, author of American Revolutions: A Continental
History, 1750-1804*
"The American Revolution Reborn is a state-of-the-field collection.
Its essays rank among the best Revolutionary scholarship to emerge
since the collapse of the republican synthesis. The authors reject
heroic narratives, repudiate nationalist analyses, and blur the
edges of allegiance, identity, and indifference."
*Benjamin H. Irvin, University of Arizona*
"The essays in this volume are careful, thought-provoking, and
highly effective, and the conclusion issues a challenging and
pungent demand that we abandon our comfortable assumptions."
*Andrew Shankman, Rutgers University-Camden*
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