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"Us Lone Wand'ring Whaling-Men": Cross-cutting Fantasies of Work and Nation in Late Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century American Whaling Narratives

Schell, Jennifer Hope (2006) "Us Lone Wand'ring Whaling-Men": Cross-cutting Fantasies of Work and Nation in Late Eighteenth- and Nineteenth-Century American Whaling Narratives. Doctoral Dissertation, University of Pittsburgh. (Unpublished)

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Abstract

My project takes up a variety of fictional and non-fictional texts about a kind of work which attracted the attention of American novelists Herman Melville, Harry Halyard, and Helen E. Brown; historian Obed Macy; and journalist J. Ross Browne, among others. In my Introduction, I argue that these whaling narratives helped to further develop and perpetuate an already existing fantasy of masculine physical labor which imagines the United States' working class men to be ideal, heroic Americans. This fantasy was so compelling and palpable that, surprisingly enough, the New England whalemen could be persistently claimed as characteristically and emblematically American, even though they worked on hierarchically-stratified floating factories, were frequently denied their Constitutional rights by maritime law, and hardly ever spent any time on American soil.In my second chapter, I scrutinize the emerging assumption of an ideological fantasy of masculine physical labor that was specifically American and interrogate how certain kinds of physical labor, farming and whaling among them, were cast as particularly American in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Chapter 3 demonstrates that there was something about the work of whaling that resisted these kinds of nationalistic appropriations, and I present a close analysis of Crèvecoeur, Cooper, and Melville's whaling narratives. My fourth chapter further explores this resistance, and I read Melville's Moby-Dick alongside J. Ross Browne's Etchings of a Whaling Cruise, arguing that both Melville and Browne—despite their texts' formal differences—share an intellectual project of configuring certain aspects of the collective, physical labor of whaling as artistically generative. Chapter 5 addresses both reactionary and progressive depictions of whaling wives with regard to domesticity and nationality. My last chapter examines how some separatist-minded Nantucket Islanders demonstrated that federalism was contested not just in the antebellum South, but in other areas of the United States as well. Taken together, all of these chapters address different aspects of the complex and multifaceted identity of the American whalemen, but they also show how a particularly resilient ideological fantasy of masculine American labor develops and gains power, perpetuating itself across time.


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Details

Item Type: University of Pittsburgh ETD
Status: Unpublished
Creators/Authors:
CreatorsEmailPitt UsernameORCID
Schell, Jennifer Hopejhast13@pitt.eduJHAST13
ETD Committee:
TitleMemberEmail AddressPitt UsernameORCID
Committee ChairGlazener, Nancyglazener@pitt.eduGLAZENER
Committee MemberCarr, Jean Fergusonjcarr@pitt.eduJCARR
Committee MemberSavage, Kirkksa@pitt.eduKSA
Committee MemberAndrade, Susanszandrade@comcast.net
Date: 21 June 2006
Date Type: Completion
Defense Date: 21 April 2006
Approval Date: 21 June 2006
Submission Date: 26 April 2006
Access Restriction: No restriction; Release the ETD for access worldwide immediately.
Institution: University of Pittsburgh
Schools and Programs: Dietrich School of Arts and Sciences > English
Degree: PhD - Doctor of Philosophy
Thesis Type: Doctoral Dissertation
Refereed: Yes
Uncontrolled Keywords: American nationalism; Cooper; identity; labor history; Melville; nationalism; whaling; work
Other ID: http://etd.library.pitt.edu/ETD/available/etd-04262006-093315/, etd-04262006-093315
Date Deposited: 10 Nov 2011 19:42
Last Modified: 15 Nov 2016 13:42
URI: http://d-scholarship.pitt.edu/id/eprint/7653

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