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- Comments: Gated by NETNEWS@AUVM.AMERICAN.EDU
- Path: sparky!uunet!paladin.american.edu!auvm!VILLVM.BITNET!RICKS
- Message-ID: <HISTORY%92111907451340@RUTVM1.RUTGERS.EDU>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.history
- Date: Thu, 19 Nov 1992 07:34:23 EST
- Sender: History <HISTORY@PSUVM.BITNET>
- From: Tom Ricks <RICKS@VILLVM.BITNET>
- Subject: US EPIC
- Lines: 20
-
- History Colleagues: I have enjoyed your comments on the issue of whether or not
- we have a "national epic", particularly the issue of genre of the "modern" epi
- c. It may well be that the US EPIC or "epitaph" will be our technological know-
- how, or at least a symbol of our technological achievements. Traditionally, epi
- c poems were, as one of our colleagues has stated, part of the mass culture's c
- onsciousness, passed down from generations by story tellers much like the griot
- in West Africa, and encompassing a set of values and "national" aspirations.
-
- I suspect that the all the comments on e-mail contain much of the answer to my
- questions. If the Civil War is our country's "watershed" event, then our nation
- al "epic" by song, film or story should/might spring from those days and issues
- , ie, Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin, the "Battle Hymn of the Republic" or, in the s
- pirit of the times, Twain's Tom Sawyer or Huck. Of course, "Gone With the Wind"
- is a major film/filmmaking event as was the recent Ken Burn's Civil War series.
- Walt Whitman's "Leaves of Grass" is an excellent choice, but...how popular was
- or is the poem. Except for a bridge in Philadelphia/Camden area, few folks
- around here know about him, I suspect.
-
- I've passed on your comments to my students and they thank all of you as
- do I once again! Tom
-