Republic of Intellect: The Friendly Club of New York City and the Making of American Literature

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JHU Press, May 15, 2007 - Biography & Autobiography - 318 pages

In the 1790s, a single conversational circle—the Friendly Club—united New York City's most ambitious young writers, and in Republic of Intellect, Bryan Waterman uses an innovative blend of literary criticism and historical narrative to re-create the club's intellectual culture. The story of the Friendly Club reveals the mutually informing conditions of authorship, literary association, print culture, and production of knowledge in a specific time and place—the tumultuous, tenuous world of post-revolutionary New York City. More than any similar group in the early American republic, the Friendly Club occupied a crossroads—geographical, professional, and otherwise—of American literary and intellectual culture.

Waterman argues that the relationships among club members' novels, plays, poetry, diaries, legal writing, and medical essays lead to important first examples of a distinctively American literature and also illuminate the local, national, and transatlantic circuits of influence and information that club members called "the republic of intellect." He addresses topics ranging from political conspiracy in the gothic novels of Charles Brockden Brown to the opening of William Dunlap's Park Theatre, from early American debates on gendered conversation to the publication of the first American medical journal. Voluntary association and print culture helped these young New Yorkers, Waterman concludes, to produce a broader and more diverse post-revolutionary public sphere than scholars have yet recognized.

 

Contents

Introduction There exists in this city a small association of men I
1
PART ONE ASSOCIATIONS
17
Sociability
24
The Illuminati Conspiracy Scare as
50
Three Unrestrained Conversation and the Understanding
92
PART TWO INDUSTRIES Of Knowledge
145
William Dunlaps Park Theatre
154
Yellow Fever the Medical
189
Samuel Millers
231
Appendix Friendly Club Membership and NineteenthCentury
243
Abbreviations
249
Index
311
Copyright

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About the author (2007)

Bryan Waterman is an assistant professor of English at New York University.