Say "New England" and you likely conjure up an image in the mind of
your listener: the snowy woods or stone wall of a Robert Frost
poem, perhaps, or that quintessential icon of the region--the
idyllic white village. Such images remind us that, as Joseph
Conforti notes, a region is not just a territory on the ground. It
is also a place in the imagination.
This ambitious work investigates New England as a cultural
invention, tracing the region's changing identity across more than
three centuries. Incorporating insights from history, literature,
art, material culture, and geography, it shows how succeeding
generations of New Englanders created and broadcast a powerful
collective identity for their region through narratives about its
past. Whether these stories were told in the writings of Frost or
Harriet Beecher Stowe, enacted in historical pageants or at
colonial revival museums, or conveyed in the pages of a geography
textbook or
Yankee magazine, New Englanders used them to
sustain their identity, revising them as needed to respond to the
shifting regional landscape.