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A Is for American: Letters and Other Characters in the Newly United States - Hardcover

 
9780375404498: A Is for American: Letters and Other Characters in the Newly United States
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What ties Americans to one another? Not race, religion, or ethnicity. At the nation’s founding, some commentators wondered whether adopting a common tongue might help bind the newly United States together. “A national language is a national tie,” Noah Webster argued in 1786, “and what country wants it more than America?”

In the century following the drafting of the Constitution, Americans from Noah Webster to Samuel F. B. Morse tried to use letters and other characters—alphabets, syllabaries, signs, and codes—to strengthen the new American nation, to string it together with chains of letters and cables of wire. Webster published a spelling book, hoping to teach Americans to speak and spell alike; Morse devised a dot-and-dash alphabet to link the country by telegraph.

Meanwhile, other Americans used these same tools to connect the new republic to the larger world. Caribbean-born William Thornton devised a “universal alphabet,” dreaming of making “the world seem more nearly allied.” Hartford minister Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet preached that the sign language of the deaf was a divinely inspired “natural language” that could help usher in the new millennium. And elocution professor Alexander Graham Bell was inspired by his father’s universal alphabet, known as Visible Speech, to invent the telephone.
Still other Americans used letters and other characters to distance themselves from the United States. Cherokee silversmith Sequoyah invented an eighty-five-character syllabary for the Cherokee language to promote his people’s independence; Abd al-Rahman Ibrahima, an aging slave in Natchez, Mississippi, demonstrated his Arabic literacy to gain both his freedom and his passage back to Africa.

In A Is for American, Jill Lepore tells the tales of these seven unusual characters—Webster, Thornton, Sequoyah, Gallaudet, Abd al-Rahman, Morse, and Bell—and their efforts to use language to define national character and shape national boundaries. Taken together, these superbly told stories, ranging from the Revolution to Reconstruction, reveal the daunting challenges faced by a new nation in unifying its diverse people.

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Review:
Nativist, xenophobe, and anti-immigration pamphleteer, Samuel Morse was known in his day for more than the telegraphic code that bears his name--one of the many things we learn from the prizewinning historian Jill Lepore in this vivid study of language and linguistic politics in the early American republic. Morse "never gave up his hatred of immigrants," Lepore writes, but all the same nursed hopes that his dot-and-dash alphabet would somehow contribute to world peace. Just so, Noah Webster, of dictionary fame and also anti-immigration, sought to lay down rules for a language that would "build Americans' fragile sense of national belonging," while Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet sought to provide a language for the deaf, and Sequoyah a syllabary for the Cherokee people that would enable them to participate as citizens in the larger society. Language is power, these reformers and inventors knew. Lepore's highly readable study of language and its political uses in 18th and 19th century America gives us a new context in which to consider language-reform movements today as well as a window into the American past. --Gregory McNamee
From the Back Cover:
"On every single page of this remarkable book I discovered nuggets of fascination and delight. I read it at one sitting, mesmerised by the scholarship, the erudition and the elegant simplicity of this story of seven consummately noble American lives, each one of them, as Jill Lepore reveals, a pilgrimage in the grand search for a nation-creating linguistic ideal."
-- Simon Winchester, author of The Professor and the Madman

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  • PublisherKnopf
  • Publication date2002
  • ISBN 10 037540449X
  • ISBN 13 9780375404498
  • BindingHardcover
  • Edition number1
  • Number of pages256
  • Rating

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