Wil VerhoevenAmericomania and the French Revolution Debate in Britain, 1789-1802
Wil Verhoeven is Chair of the American Studies Department and Professor of American Culture and Cultural Theory at the University of Groningen, and is Visiting Scholar in the American Studies Department at Brown University, Rhode Island. He is the author of Gilbert Imlay: Citizen of the World (2008), and the editor of Revolutionary Histories: Transatlantic Cultural Nationalism, 1775-1815 (2002), Epistolary Histories: Letters, Fiction, Culture (with Amanda Gilroy, 2000) and Revolutions and Watersheds: Transatlantic Dialogues, 1775-1815 (with Beth Dolan, 1999). He previously served as the Associate Dean for Education in the School of Humanities at the University of Groningen. He was the inaugural Charles H. Watts II Professor in the History of the Book and Historical Bibliography, an endowed visiting professorship at the John Carter Brown Library and Department of English, Brown University (2002-3).
Introduction: utopianism in practice: the American front of the French
Revolution in Britain, 1789-1802; 1. 'The war of systems': print culture
and the institutionalization of the political divide in the 1790s; 2.
'Cultivators of the earth': the American crisis and the emergence of the
freehold farmer, 1763-83; 3. 'Rabies Agri': or, wilderness for sale; 4.
'The calculated rise of the American empire': the radicalization of
American utopianism; 5. 'The mania of emigration': new philosophers in the
wilderness; 6. 'The precious pearl of liberty': from Newgate Prison to
Ohiopiomingo; 7. 'Come to these Arcadian regions where there is room for
millions': politics for the people; 8. 'Look before you leap': the
demonization of Jacobin America; 9. 'Parrying the enemy with their own
weapons': dystopianism and the popular discourse of fear; Postscript.
'Mania reformation': the demise of transatlantic utopianism.