A Season of Renewal: The Columbian Exposition and Victorian America
By (Author) Dennis B. Downey
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th November 2001
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
History of science
973.86
Hardback
264
Offers an engaging analysis of the 1893 Chicago World's Fair (the Colombian Exposition), generally regarded as the preeminent cultural event in late nineteenth century America. This study offers an engaging reassessment of the 1893 Chicago World's Fair (the Columbian Exposition), generally regarded as the preeminent civic pageant in Victorian America. Based on exhaustive research, Downey uses the Exposition as a representative cultural symbol to challenge established interpretations of the event and to suggest a new approach to writing American cultural history. Adopting the approach of "culture as conversation," he stresses the manner in which the Chicago fair reflected the main currents and conflicting tendencies in American life at the end of the nineteenth century. Viewing the Exposition as a cultural moment, Downey emphasizes the theme of "renewal" as central to the cultural aspirations of thhe enterprise and its engagement of public life. Throughout the narrative, the divergent voices that comprised a great "cultural conversation" on the salient issues of the day emerge through their presence at and participation in the Exposition. This lively account offers new insights into the cultural climate of the period, while introducing readers to the sheer majesty and splendor of an event that captivated the city and the nation more than a century ago.
.,."useful for undergraduate and graduate collections as well as being a good read on one of America's more revealing artifacts."-Choice
...useful for undergraduate and graduate collections as well as being a good read on one of America's more revealing artifacts.-Choice
Downey has written a solid history of the exposition and the culture tensions that animated it.-The Journal of American History
"Downey has written a solid history of the exposition and the culture tensions that animated it."-The Journal of American History
..."useful for undergraduate and graduate collections as well as being a good read on one of America's more revealing artifacts."-Choice
Dennis B. Downey is Professor of History at Millersville University. The author of two other books and more than two dozen articles, Downey is a specialist in American social and cultural history in the period 1870-1930. He lives in Lancaster, Pennsylvania, with his wife and five children.