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Chapter 15 - Beyond the City and the Country: Rural Scarcity and Indigenous Survivance

from Part II - Issues

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 March 2025

John D. Kerkering
Affiliation:
Loyola University, Chicago
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Summary

This chapter explores how country and city stand in as proxies for political, racial, and cultural positions. The country operates as the custodian of the “real America,” which becomes imagined as white, masculine, traditionalist, and working class. The city, meanwhile, teems with the elite and the cosmopolitan. Such gestures conjure away any trace of Indigenous peoples, migrant farmers and ranchers, urban–rural labor alliances, black agrarian Populists, and the city’s intersectional working class. Even as we must acknowledge the generative role country-and-city scholarship has played in US literary criticism, this chapter ultimately calls for rethinking this binary by turning to texts that provide a different account of the rural – a narrative that the country as a concept so effectively obfuscates. Writing by authors such as Hamlin Garland and Zitkála-Šá, conventionally categorized as local-color or regionalist, demonstrates that scarcity and survivance rather than city and country shaped the cultural politics of rural spaces in the nineteenth century. They both challenged the bureaucratic state, as an entity that protected the interests of finance capital by subjecting settlers to constant precarity and violently seeking to dispossess Indigenous peoples of their own land, liberty, and literature.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2025

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References

Further Reading

Ali, Omar H. In the Lion’s Mouth: Black Populism in the New South, 1886–1900. University of Mississippi Press, 2010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dunbar-Ortiz, Roxanne. Not A Nation of Immigrants: Settler Colonialism, White Supremacy, and a History of Erasure and Exclusion. Beacon Press, 2021.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Foote, Stephanie. Regional Fictions: Culture and Identity in Nineteenth-Century American Literature. University of Wisconsin Press, 2001.Google Scholar
Howard, June. The Center of the World: Regional Writing and the Puzzles of Place-Time. Oxford University Press, 2018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
King, Tiffany Lethabo. The Black Shoals: Offshore Formations of Black and Native Studies. Duke University Press, 2019.Google Scholar
Simpson, Leanne Betasamosake. As We Have Always Done: Indigenous Freedom through Radical Resistance. University of Minnesota Press, 2017.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stein, Judith. “‘Of Mr. Booker T. Washington and Others’: The Political Economy of Racism in the United States,” Science & Society 38:4 (1974–1975), 422463.Google Scholar
Watts, Edward. An American Colony: Regionalism and the Roots of Midwestern Culture. Ohio University Press, 2002.Google Scholar
White, Ed. The Backcountry and the City: Colonization and Conflict in Early America. University of Minnesota Press, 2005.Google Scholar
Woertendyke, Gretchen J. Hemispheric Regionalism: Romance and the Geography of Genre. Oxford University Press, 2016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

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