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For decades, scholars have been expanding the geographic and temporal lenses through which they study "American" identities, cultures, and texts. The logic of this reconsideration is simple and sound: the notion of an autochthonous, independent US literature and culture is inaccurate and, at bottom, in bad faith. What this project lacks in freshness, it makes up for in continued relevance. Decades after the transnational shift began, American exceptionalism and its tangle of assumptions persist. Indeed, the remapping of identities and relationships is a vast imaginative effort, one of several generations, in the very least.
This long revaluation requires textured analysis and new conceptual frameworks. In Imitation Nation: Red, White, and Blackface in Early and Antebellum US Literature, Jason Richards offers both. Triangulating modes of inquiry, Richards studies hiding-in-plain-sight relationships among white Americans, African Americans, Native Americans, and white Europeans. For example, Richards combines insights from scholarship on blackface minstrelsy with those gleaned from settler postcolonial theory to bring Natty Bumppo's native and African American mimesis into sharp focus. This approach to James Fenimore Cooper's The Pioneers (1823) reveals the dependence of American whiteness on Native American, African American, and British Anglo-Saxon identities. Exploring new relationships among established schools of thought, Richards provides a model for redressing the insularity that has long shaped conceptions of US history, literature, and culture.
Richards borrows from nineteenth-century social theorist Gabriel Tarde, who viewed imitation, not essence, as the basis of identity. Tarde's notion that identity is contingent on one's response to others is particularly suggestive in the early American and antebellum contexts. As Richards notes, the theater's rapid growth in the early Republic reflected a longing for national culture keyed to an implicit understanding that Americanness would be achieved through imitation, specifically, through embodying and absorbing Native American, African American, and European identities. Engaging the work of Philip J. Deloria, Eric Lott, and Robert S. Levine, Richards delineates mutually constitutive relationships among diverse acts of cross-racial, cross-Atlantic mimesis. Imitation Nation makes an important contribution to the scholarship of blackface minstrelsy. But because mimesis took place offstage, too, Richards conceptualizes redface and blackface broadly to cover a range of cross-racial imitations.
While mimesis occurs wherever contact happens, it assumed particularly robust form in a new republic defined by remarkable...