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Luxurious Citizens

The Politics of Consumption in Nineteenth-Century America

Joanna Cohen

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Hardback

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English
University of Pennsylvania Press
20 February 2017
After the Revolution, Americans abandoned the political economy of self-denial and sacrifice that had secured their independence. In its place, they created one that empowered the modern citizen-consumer. This profound transformation was the uncoordinated and self-serving work of merchants, manufacturers, advertisers, auctioneers, politicians, and consumers themselves, who collectively created the nation's modern consumer economy: one that encouraged individuals to indulge their desires for the sake of the public good and cast the freedom to consume as a triumph of democracy. In Luxurious Citizens, Joanna Cohen traces the remarkable ways in which Americans tied consumer desire to the national interest between the end of the Revolution and the Civil War.

Illuminating the links between political culture, private wants, and imagined economies, Cohen offers a new understanding of the relationship between citizens and the nation-state in nineteenth-century America. By charting the contest over economic rights and obligations in the United States, Luxurious Citizens argues that while many less powerful Americans helped to create the citizen-consumer it was during the Civil War that the Union government made use of this figure, by placing the responsibility for the nation's economic strength and stability on the shoulders of the people. Union victory thus enshrined a new civic duty in American life, one founded on the freedom to buy as you pleased. Reinterpreting the history of the tariff, slavery, and the coming of the Civil War through an examination of everyday acts of consumption and commerce, Cohen reveals the important ways in which nineteenth-century Americans transformed their individual desires for goods into an index of civic worth and fixed unbridled consumption at the heart of modern America's political economy.
By:  
Imprint:   University of Pennsylvania Press
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 229mm,  Width: 152mm,  Spine: 30mm
Weight:   621g
ISBN:   9780812248920
ISBN 10:   0812248929
Series:   America in the Nineteenth Century
Pages:   296
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Primary
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Joanna Cohen teaches American history at Queen Mary University of London.

Reviews for Luxurious Citizens: The Politics of Consumption in Nineteenth-Century America

Luxurious Citizens demonstrates wonderfully how American political culture in the nineteenth century created 'citizen consumers' as an important constituency. With a sophisticated blend of sources from the worlds of culture, policy, and business, Joanna Cohen reexamines familiar political and economic debates to reveal new meanings of consumption in American society. -Ellen Hartigan-O'Connor, University of California, Davis Combining a range of sources, including political tracts and speeches, business records and advertisements, and consumers' letters and diaries, Cohen artfully weaves together six chapters to show how Americans came to see shopping as a civic duty rather than a sacrifice. -Journal of Social History With shimmering vignettes, Cohen's Luxurious Citizens draws us into the contested terrain of the early republic's clamoring eager consumers. And with uncommonly compelling arguments, Cohen guides us through a profoundly original interpretation of the years between Revolution and Civil War. -Cathy Matson, University of Delaware Cohen provides a new and insightful analysis of America political economy . . . The cultural history is vibrant and compelling throughout. -The American Historian Luxurious Citizens offers a bold new history of American civic culture between the Revolution and the Civil War. Skillfully moving between the learned treatises of political economists and the everyday desires of shoppers, Cohen rethinks enduring questions of capitalism, citizenship, and governance through the crucial lens of consumerism. -Seth Rockman, Brown University Luxurious Citizens challenges us to rethink the historical origins of the modern American consumer-citizen. A rich cultural and political history of economic ideas, no other book explains so well how the United States, a country born from a consumer boycott against British luxuries, became a nation in which consumer gratification was a fundamental entitlement of democratic citizenship. Deeply researched, gracefully written, incisively argued, Luxurious Citizens is no less timely. -Jonathan Levy, University of Chicago With [her] marvelous new study, Joanna Cohen [has] demonstrated how the consumer has been a key category in American political culture since the late eighteenth century . . . [This] highly original and beautifully written and researched book has expanded the vision of the consumer citizen . . . [and] effectively put to bed tired assumptions about the commercialization of politics and the apolitical nature of consumer culture in modern America. -Enterprise & Society


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