The Chosen People: The Hudson River School and the Construction of American Identity Cover Image

The Chosen People: The Hudson River School and the Construction of American Identity
The Chosen People: The Hudson River School and the Construction of American Identity

Author(s): Tricia Cusack
Subject(s): Christian Theology and Religion, Human Geography, Environmental Geography, Political history, Social history, Nationalism Studies, 19th Century, Politics and Identity
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Śląskiego
Keywords: painting; the Hudson River School; American Identity; Christian identity; pilgrim-pioneer; fluidity; nationalist discourse;

Summary/Abstract: This text considers nineteenth-century riverscapes of the Hudson in relation to the formation of American identity. It argues that riverscapes in the United States contributed to welding a national identity to a Christian one, although officially the identities were distinct. I examine the role of the Hudson River School in the creation of the ‘wilderness’ as an image of American homeland, and how this construct incorporated the iconic figure of the Euro-American Christian 'pilgrim-pioneer.’ America looked more to the future than to the past for its national narrative, and an orientation to the future was symbolized in art by the flow of the Hudson toward distant horizons, while the pioneer identity was extended to embrace the entrepreneur-developer. The pioneer has remained an iconic figure for American nationalism, but is now more firmly located in the nation’s past; Janus’s gaze has been adjusted, demonstrating the potentially fluid character of nationalist discourse.

  • Issue Year: 14/2021
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 107-152
  • Page Count: 46
  • Language: English