The Postal Age: The Emergence of Modern Communications in Nineteenth-Century America

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Product Details
Price
$38.40
Publisher
University of Chicago Press
Publish Date
Pages
238
Dimensions
6.48 X 8.93 X 0.59 inches | 0.78 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9780226327211

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About the Author
David M. Henkin is associate professor of history at the University of California, Berkeley. He is the author of City Reading.
Reviews
For the first half century of [the U.S. Postal Service's] founding, its main function was to circulate newspapers to a national audience. . . . That all changed in 1845 when Congress enacted the first in a series of laws that sharply reduced the cost of sending letters. The new rates led to a vast surge in personal correspondence. They set up a communications revolution that the historian David Henkin has chronicled in an engaging new book called The Postal Age.--Geoff Nunberg "Fresh Air"
Henkin's is that rare book suitable for undergraduates, instructive to graduate students, and useful for any scholar of nineteenth-century America. . . . Ultimately, Henkin has written an original, ambitious, compelling, and elegant book that should spur greater scholarly attention to the history of communications in nineteenth-century America.--Konstantin Dierks "Journal of the Early Republic"
This rich study is well referenced. . . . Highly recommended.--Konstantin Dierks "Choice"
Henkin is something of a model for at once taking seriously and moving beyond his theoretical sources; by engaging the complex particulars of the past, he produces a more compelling account of the making and remaking of American public life. . . . What Henkin is in the process of achieving--with City Reading and The Postal Age as the first two parts--is a thoroughgoing reimagining of the inner worlds of antebellum Americans. . . . Like Tocqueville, Henkin manages to suggest a proper note of awe in the face of the communications revolution of the middle of the nineteenth century. There is something similarly wondrous about his achievement in this book. --David Quigley "Reviews in American History"
Here is a postal culture that will seem all too familiar to modern readers. Here are the real roots of our interconnected age.--Robert MacDougall "Business History Review"
The Postal Age develops a strong case for studying the developmental interplay of communication technologies, publics, and practices of reading, seeing, and writing as constitutive of self, other, and nation. . . . By sensitively addressing the cultural implications of changing patterns of participation and use of mail exchange, [the book] advances scholarship on the role of the post in everyday life.--Derek W. Valliant "New England Quarterly"
Henkin's engaging, well-written book ought to receive a wide readership. . . . He shows that today's expectations of ubiquitous and instant accessibility have their social and cultural roots in the nineteenth-century post office. Similarly, Henkin reminds us that advances in the speed and reliability of communications often occur through political will and administrative initiatives, with no new technological innovations. Finally, Henkin provides a valuable model for understanding the social and cultural history of a new communications medium, by explaining how individuals encountered, understood, and wove it into the fabric of their lives.--David Hochfelder "Journal of American History"

"The Postal Age succeeds in joining two kinds of history writing: the thoroughly professional and the engagingly popular. David M. Henkin offers a clinic in how to combine social analysis of institutions with cultural study of the rituals, emotions, and meanings by which people pattern their lives."

--Richard Wightman Fox, author of Jesus in America: Personal Savior, Cultural Hero, National Obsession "Journal of American History"

"The Postal Age is a remarkable achievement. With elegance, analytical precision, and a firm command of the sources, Henkin shows how mid-nineteenth century Americans became a nation of letter-writers. In so doing, he offers fresh insights into several well-known events--including the Gold Rush and the Civil War--while inviting us to ponder the extent to which the postal system, and not the electric telegraph, laid the cultural foundations not only for modern telecommunications, but also for the habits of interconnectedness that are such a touchstone of modernity."Spreading the News: The American Postal System from Franklin to Morse>

--Richard R. John, author of Spreading the News: The American Postal System from F "Journal of American History"

"David Henkin's The Postal Age is a brilliant successor to his earlier City Reading, and continues his insightful investigations of communications and social life. The Postal Age is engagingly written, rich with anecdotes and observations that dramatize and illuminate the manifold facets of 'postal culture' in the antebellum United States. Americans took advantage of a growing and increasingly accessible postal system to exchange money, news, seeds, daguerreotypes, love letters, and anonymous valentines (not to mention the earliest forms of spam and junk mail), transforming courtship, commerce, and civic life. At every stage, Henkin avoids the temptations of crass determinism to offer a nuanced view of the complicated relationships between technologies and systems and social forms. The Postal Age is a major contribution to American social history and to the history of communications in general."Going Nucular: Language, Politics, and Culture in Controversial Times>

--Nunberg, author of Going Nucular: Language, Politics, and Culture in Controversi "Journal of American History"
Like Tocqueville, Henkin manages to suggest a proper note of awe in the face of the communications revolution. . . . There is something similarly wondrous about his achievement in this book.--David Quigley "Reviews in American History"
The Postal Age develops a strong case for studying the developmental interplay of communcation technologies, publics, and practices of reading, seeing, and writing as constitutive of self, other, and nation.--Derek W. Vaillant "New England Quartely"