The Boy's Catlin

The Boy's Catlin

Author: George Catlin

Publisher:

Published: 1909

Total Pages: 436

ISBN-13:

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Mainly an abridgment of Catlin's "Letters and notes on the manners, customs and condition of the North American Indians."


Catlin and His Contemporaries

Catlin and His Contemporaries

Author: Brian W. Dippie

Publisher: U of Nebraska Press

Published: 1990-01-01

Total Pages: 600

ISBN-13: 9780803216839

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George Catlin's paintings and the vision behind them have become part of our understanding of a lost America. We see the Indian past through Catlin's eyes, imagine a younger, fresher land in his bright hues. But he spent only a few years in what he considered Indian country. The rest of his long life?more than thirty years?wasødevoted largely to promoting, repainting, and selling his collection?in short, to seeking patronage. Catlin and His Contemporaries examines how the preeminent painter of western Indians before the Civil War went about the business of making a living from his work. Catlin shared with such artists as Seth Eastman and John Mix Stanley a desire to preserve a visual record of a race seen as doomed and competed with them for federal assistance. In a young republic with little institutional and governmental support available, painters, writers, and scholars became rivals and sometimes bitter adversaries. Brian W. Dippie untangles the complex web of interrelationships between artists, government officials, members of Congress, businessmen, antiquarians and literati, kings and queens, and the Indians themselves. In this history of the politics of patronage during the nineteenth century, luminaries like Henry Rowe Schoolcraft, Henry H. Sibley, John James Audubon, Alfred Jacob Miller, and Karl Bodmer are linked with Catlin in a contest for the support of the arts, setting a precedent for later generations. That the contenders "produced so much of enduring importance under such trying circumstances," Dippie observes,"was the sought-for miracle that had seemed to elude them in their lives."


A History of American English

A History of American English

Author: J. L. Dillard

Publisher: Routledge

Published: 2014-09-25

Total Pages: 268

ISBN-13: 1317899601

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This impressive volume provides a chronological, narrative account of the development of American English from its earliest origins to the present day.