Thesis ID: CBB001567635

Monster on the Margin: The Sea Serpent Phenomenon in New England, 1817--1849 (2014)

unapi

Burns, Elizabeth Iris (Author)


Thornton, Tamara
State University of New York at Buffalo
Daly, Robert
Thornton, Tamara
Seeman, Erik
Daly, Robert


Publication Date: 2014
Edition Details: Advisor: Seeman, Erik; Committee Members: Daly, Robert, Thornton, Tamara.
Physical Details: 333 pp.
Language: English

Monster on the Margin: The Sea Serpent Phenomenon in New England, 1817-1849, by Elizabeth Iris Burns, is a cultural history of the Sea Serpent seen by thousands of people on the New England coast, treating first, the creature's impact in the writing of New England regional identity, a process evident in reportage, science, essays, poetry and fiction; second, scientific inquiry in relation to a two-sided nationalistic discourse of natural history; and third, the New England project of historicizing the Sea Serpent, when newspaper editors and writers characterized the creature in the context of their troubled recent past and ambivalent place in presidents Jefferson and Madison's expanding union. It argues that the Sea Serpent contained anxieties and aspirations of New England in these years, and so was both a hot and cold medium according to the definitions of Marshall McLuhan. Finally, the work explores the popular cultural dimensions of the Sea Serpent, relating it to a change in attitude toward the seashore from repulsion to fascination and discusses how the Sea Serpent anticipated the showmanship of P.T. Barnum. The hot media of Sea Serpent reports, written to list facts, cooled down over several decades to admit increasing elaboration, such that the phenomenon in the antebellum allowed the folkloric and psychological refraction seen in Nathaniel Hawthorne's "Egotism, or the Bosom Serpent," 1841, and the fantastic mixed-form novel, Eugene Batchelder's Romance of the Sea Serpent, or, The Icthyosaurus, 1849. In the Early Republic, the Sea Serpent, by his cultural work and in spite of his mythic associations, became real.

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Description Cited in Dissertation Abstracts International-A 75/11(E), May 2015. Proquest Document ID: 1562524114.


Citation URI
https://data.isiscb.org/isis/citation/CBB001567635/

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Authors & Contributors
Regal, Brian
Charles G.M. Paxton
Friedman, Lester D.
Mueller, Eddy Von
William Hughes
Darren Naish
Journals
Endeavour: Review of the Progress of Science
Victorian Literature and Culture
Isis: International Review Devoted to the History of Science and Its Cultural Influences
History of Science
Earth Sciences History: Journal of the History of the Earth Sciences Society
Centaurus: International Magazine of the History of Mathematics, Science, and Technology
Publishers
University of Wales Press
University of California Press
Rutgers University Press
Rowman & Littlefield
Pegasus Books
Manchester University Press
Concepts
Teratology; monsters
Popular culture
Public understanding of science
Science and literature
Animals, mythical
Oceans and seas
People
Shelley, Mary Wollstonecraft
Camp, L. Sprague de
Shelley, Percy Bysshe
Owen, Richard
Dickens, Charles
Darwin, Erasmus
Time Periods
19th century
20th century
Medieval
21st century
20th century, early
Ancient
Places
Great Britain
United States
Barcelona (Spain)
New England (U.S.)
London (England)
Greece
Institutions
Zoological Gardens (London, England)
Great Britain. Royal Navy
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