Laura Goldblatt, Richard Handler
The American Stamp
Postal Iconography, Democratic Citizenship, and Consumerism in the United States
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Laura Goldblatt, Richard Handler
The American Stamp
Postal Iconography, Democratic Citizenship, and Consumerism in the United States
- Gebundenes Buch
Examining the canon of nineteenth- and twentieth-century American stamps, Laura Goldblatt and Richard Handler show how postal iconography and material culture offer a window into the contested meanings and responsibilities of U.S. citizenship.
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Examining the canon of nineteenth- and twentieth-century American stamps, Laura Goldblatt and Richard Handler show how postal iconography and material culture offer a window into the contested meanings and responsibilities of U.S. citizenship.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Columbia University Press
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Januar 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 237mm x 163mm x 31mm
- Gewicht: 676g
- ISBN-13: 9780231208246
- ISBN-10: 0231208243
- Artikelnr.: 64079018
- Verlag: Columbia University Press
- Seitenzahl: 368
- Erscheinungstermin: 31. Januar 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 237mm x 163mm x 31mm
- Gewicht: 676g
- ISBN-13: 9780231208246
- ISBN-10: 0231208243
- Artikelnr.: 64079018
Laura Goldblatt is an assistant professor of English at the University of Virginia. Richard Handler is professor of anthropology and global studies at the University of Virginia.
Introduction
Part I: Mailing, Collecting, Cataloguing
1. The Postal Infrastructure of Democratic Citizenship
2. Creating Post-postal Value: Stamp Collecting
3. U.S. Stamps: Cataloguing Polities and Framing National Culture
Part II: Storied Ancestors
4. Fixing the Iconography of National Ancestry: Dead Heads and Moving
Bodies During the U.S. Civil War
5. Mining History and Marketing Stamps at the World's Fairs
6. The People in the Postal Polity: Twentieth-Century Definitive Stamps and
the Iconography of Democratic Inclusion
Part III: The Stamp of Neoliberalism
7. Postal People: From Industrial Labor, Black Power, and Social Service to
Cartoon Citizenship
8. Segregating Stamps: From White Definitives to Racialized Commemoratives
9. How to Do Things with Stamps, Part I: First-Day Covers
10. How to Do Things with Stamps, Part II: Shooting the Moon
Conclusion: Postal Circulation and Citizenship at the End of the American
Century
Acknowledgments
Appendix: How Many People Collect Stamps in the United States?
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Part I: Mailing, Collecting, Cataloguing
1. The Postal Infrastructure of Democratic Citizenship
2. Creating Post-postal Value: Stamp Collecting
3. U.S. Stamps: Cataloguing Polities and Framing National Culture
Part II: Storied Ancestors
4. Fixing the Iconography of National Ancestry: Dead Heads and Moving
Bodies During the U.S. Civil War
5. Mining History and Marketing Stamps at the World's Fairs
6. The People in the Postal Polity: Twentieth-Century Definitive Stamps and
the Iconography of Democratic Inclusion
Part III: The Stamp of Neoliberalism
7. Postal People: From Industrial Labor, Black Power, and Social Service to
Cartoon Citizenship
8. Segregating Stamps: From White Definitives to Racialized Commemoratives
9. How to Do Things with Stamps, Part I: First-Day Covers
10. How to Do Things with Stamps, Part II: Shooting the Moon
Conclusion: Postal Circulation and Citizenship at the End of the American
Century
Acknowledgments
Appendix: How Many People Collect Stamps in the United States?
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Introduction
Part I: Mailing, Collecting, Cataloguing
1. The Postal Infrastructure of Democratic Citizenship
2. Creating Post-postal Value: Stamp Collecting
3. U.S. Stamps: Cataloguing Polities and Framing National Culture
Part II: Storied Ancestors
4. Fixing the Iconography of National Ancestry: Dead Heads and Moving
Bodies During the U.S. Civil War
5. Mining History and Marketing Stamps at the World's Fairs
6. The People in the Postal Polity: Twentieth-Century Definitive Stamps and
the Iconography of Democratic Inclusion
Part III: The Stamp of Neoliberalism
7. Postal People: From Industrial Labor, Black Power, and Social Service to
Cartoon Citizenship
8. Segregating Stamps: From White Definitives to Racialized Commemoratives
9. How to Do Things with Stamps, Part I: First-Day Covers
10. How to Do Things with Stamps, Part II: Shooting the Moon
Conclusion: Postal Circulation and Citizenship at the End of the American
Century
Acknowledgments
Appendix: How Many People Collect Stamps in the United States?
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Part I: Mailing, Collecting, Cataloguing
1. The Postal Infrastructure of Democratic Citizenship
2. Creating Post-postal Value: Stamp Collecting
3. U.S. Stamps: Cataloguing Polities and Framing National Culture
Part II: Storied Ancestors
4. Fixing the Iconography of National Ancestry: Dead Heads and Moving
Bodies During the U.S. Civil War
5. Mining History and Marketing Stamps at the World's Fairs
6. The People in the Postal Polity: Twentieth-Century Definitive Stamps and
the Iconography of Democratic Inclusion
Part III: The Stamp of Neoliberalism
7. Postal People: From Industrial Labor, Black Power, and Social Service to
Cartoon Citizenship
8. Segregating Stamps: From White Definitives to Racialized Commemoratives
9. How to Do Things with Stamps, Part I: First-Day Covers
10. How to Do Things with Stamps, Part II: Shooting the Moon
Conclusion: Postal Circulation and Citizenship at the End of the American
Century
Acknowledgments
Appendix: How Many People Collect Stamps in the United States?
Notes
Bibliography
Index