City Reading: Written Words and Public Spaces in Antebellum New York (Popular Cultures, Everyday Lives) Buy on Amazon
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City Reading: Written Words and Public Spaces in Antebellum New York (Popular Cultures, Everyday Lives)

Author David Henkin
Category History
32.00 USD

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Book Details
Author(s) David Henkin
ISBN / ASIN 0231107455
ISBN-13 9780231107457
Availability Usually ships in 24 hours
Sales Rank #1,385,110
Category History
Marketplace United States 🇺🇸
Description
Cultural historian David Henkin explores the influential but little-noticed role played by reading in New York City's public life between 1825 and 1865. From the opening of the Erie Canal to the end of the Civil War, New York became a metropolis, and demographic, economic, and physical changes erased the old markers of continuity and order. As New York became a crowded city of strangers, everyday encounters with impersonal signs, papers, and bank notes altered people's perceptions of connectedness to the new world they lived in. The 'ubiquitous urban texts'--from newspapers to paper money, from street signs to handbills--became both indispensable urban guides and apt symbols for a new kind of public life that emerged first in New York. City Reading focuses on four principal categories of public reading: street signs and store signs; handbills and trade cards; newspapers; and paper money. Drawing on a wealth of visual sources and written texts that document the changing cityscape--including novels, diaries, newspapers, municipal guides, and government records--Henkin shows that public acts of reading (to a much greater extent than private, solitary reading) determined how New Yorkers of all backgrounds came to define themselves and their urban community.
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