In Search of America: Transatlantic Essays, 1951-1990
By (Author) Phyllis Palmer
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th April 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
History of the Americas
973
Hardback
470
This wide ranging selection of essays by a renowned English scholar express American history, literature, and culture. Many aspects and periods of American history, life, and thought are examined: military, political, biographical, comparative, and more. The text is scholarly, yet readable. The essays cover the young nation, George Washington, European attitudes toward the United States and vice versa, anti-Americanism, and American writers. This work seeks to serve as supplemental reading for courses in American history, American literature, and American studies. "In Search of America" devotes an entire section to the early problems of the young nation in achieving intellectual and artistic, as well as political, idependence. Military, biographical, and other aspects of George Washington provide thought-provoking material. The temperament and talent of American writers, including Stephen Crane, Henry Adams, and Willa Cather are considered.
MARCUS CUNLIFFE (1922-1990) was a British-born historian who wrote more than a dozen books on American history and literature. A commentator on American life, he had been University Professor at George Washington University since 1980. He was a prolific writer, focusing extensively on George Washington and the early history of the United States. He authored, among others, The Nation Takes Shape, American Presidents and the Presidency, The Ages of Man: From Sav-age to Sew-age, Soldiers and Civilians, and The Literature of the United States.