Available Formats
Transatlantic Culture in the Long Nineteenth Century: Anglo-American Relations and Intertwined Identities
By (Author) Howard LeRoy Malchow
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
11th December 2025
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Social and cultural history
International relations
Hardback
304
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
Ranging through the long nineteenth century, this book explores the evolving cultural relationship between Britain and the United States during this period. From language, speech and racial attitudes to imaginings of the Western frontier, travel memoirs, the role of theatre and Anglophilia and Anglophobia, it shows how actors on both sides of the Atlantic expressed understanding of themselves and their not-so-foreign Other.
Tracing the ways in which these cultural activities served to imagine, shape, confirm and maintain cultural topographies, it shows how they constructed Anglo-American differences which endure today. It challenges narratives of fixed national identity by emphasising cultural borrowing, hybridity and shifting perspectives in an era of faster, easier transatlantic and American continental travel, and promotes an understanding of how these identities were both entrenched and challenged.
Howard LeRoy Malchow is Walter S. Dickson Professor of English and American History, Tufts University, USA. He is the author of many books including History and International Relations (2020) and Special Relations: The Americanization of Britain (2011).