Synopses & Reviews
The development of the American nation has typically been interpreted in terms of its expansion through space, specifically its growth westward. In this innovative study, Thomas Allen posits time, not space, as the most significant territory of the young nation. He argues that beginning in the nineteenth century, the actual geography of the nation became less important, as Americans imagined the future as their true national territory.
Allen explores how transformations in the perception of time shaped American conceptions of democratic society and modern nationhood. He focuses on three ways of imagining time: the romantic historical time that prevailed at the outset of the nineteenth century, the geological "deep time" that arose as widely read scientific works displaced biblical chronology with a new scale of millions of years of natural history, and the technology-driven "clock time" that became central to American culture by century's end. Allen analyzes cultural artifacts ranging from clocks and scientific treatises to paintings and literary narratives to show how Americans made use of these diverse ideas about time to create competing visions of American nationhood.
Review
A Republic in Time is sure to become a classic in American studies.
--Alexis McCrossen, Southern Methodist University, author of Holy Day, Holiday: The American Sunday
Review
"An interesting literary analysis and material cultural investigation into how elite antebellum northern narratives depicted and understood time."
Journal of American History
Review
"Offers a vivid and often provocative window into nineteenth century American perceptions of time. . . . Unique both in its scope and questions addressed."
Southern Historian
Review
"Well-researched. . . . Draws upon material culture and literary history to present the range of nineteenth-century temporal experiences. . . . Impressive."
-- American Historical Review
Review
"Insightful. . . . Should challenge historians of any specialization to consider how history writing relies on ideas about time that have their own complex history."
-- Journal of Southern History
Review
"An important, provocative, and imaginative work, one that will challenge and enlighten historians and literary critics alike. . . . Well worth the time."
-- Reviews in American History
Review
"[A] pioneering interdisciplinary approach. . . . By integrating time, politics, and national identity, [Allen] deepens and shifts the scholarship of time and timekeeping, adding new variations, subtleties, and dimensions."
-- Technology and Culture
Review
"A provocative and suggestive read. . . . Not only provides illuminating and original approaches to the study of nineteenth-century culture, but actually challenges some of the trends currently doing the rounds in American Studies."
-- 49th Parallel
Review
"Learned and wide-ranging . . . a revisionist project filled with illuminating and timely surprises. . . . Fresh and revealing. . . . A brilliant contribution."
-- Historically Speaking
Review
"Stands at the intersection between literature exploring the development of nationalism and studies in sociology and social history that examine the complexity of modern temporal consciousness."
--The Historian
Review
Allen handles each and every area deftly and comprehensively, producing a fascinating study that is a true pleasure to read.
--Elizabeth L. Barnes, College of William and Mary
Review
"In this compelling work, Thomas M. Allen argues that spatial transformation was less important in the imagining of America by its people than the perception of time. . . . This shift in thinking opens the reader to envision more complex, and at times competing, ideas of what nationhood meant to Americans during this period."
--Indiana Magazine of History
Review
"Subtle and well-researched. . . . Impressive."
-- American Historical Review
Review
"Makes its important case by reconstructing the rich history of debate and negotiation that the American national project has entailed."
Journal of Interdisciplinary History
About the Author
Thomas M. Allen is assistant professor of English at the University of Ottawa.
Table of Contents
"Stands at the intersection between literature exploring the development of nationalism and studies in sociology and social history that examine the complexity of modern temporal consciousness."
--The Historian "In this compelling work, Thomas M. Allen argues that spatial transformation was less important in the imagining of America by its people than the perception of time. . . . This shift in thinking opens the reader to envision more complex, and at times competing, ideas of what nationhood meant to Americans during this period."
--Indiana Magazine of History "A provocative and suggestive read. . . . Not only provides illuminating and original approaches to the study of nineteenth-century culture, but actually challenges some of the trends currently doing the rounds in American Studies."
-- 49th Parallel "Subtle and well-researched. . . . Impressive."
-- American Historical Review "Well-researched. . . . Draws upon material culture and literary history to present the range of nineteenth-century temporal experiences. . . . Impressive."
-- American Historical Review "An important, provocative, and imaginative work, one that will challenge and enlighten historians and literary critics alike. . . . Well worth the time."
-- Reviews in American History "Insightful. . . . Should challenge historians of any specialization to consider how history writing relies on ideas about time that have their own complex history."
-- Journal of Southern History "[A] pioneering interdisciplinary approach. . . . By integrating time, politics, and national identity, [Allen] deepens and shifts the scholarship of time and timekeeping, adding new variations, subtleties, and dimensions."
-- Technology and Culture "Offers a vivid and often provocative window into nineteenth century American perceptions of time. . . . Unique both in its scope and questions addressed."
Southern Historian "Makes its important case by reconstructing the rich history of debate and negotiation that the American national project has entailed."
Journal of Interdisciplinary History "An interesting literary analysis and material cultural investigation into how elite antebellum northern narratives depicted and understood time."
Journal of American History "Learned and wide-ranging . . . a revisionist project filled with illuminating and timely surprises. . . . Fresh and revealing. . . . A brilliant contribution."
-- Historically Speaking Allen handles each and every area deftly and comprehensively, producing a fascinating study that is a true pleasure to read.
--Elizabeth L. Barnes, College of William and Mary A Republic in Time is sure to become a classic in American studies.
--Alexis McCrossen, Southern Methodist University, author of Holy Day, Holiday: The American Sunday