Description

Before the Revolution, most American colonists had tended to think of themselves as British and were often deeply enamored with the culture and fashions of their cousins’ London. That shifted after 1783 as many new citizens tried to kickstart a distinctively American culture; to give America a national character different and distinctive from the national character of Britain. Following a general survey of the many different ways that these artists and intellectuals tried to declare their cultural independence, we’ll zero in on Noah Webster, the Connecticut schoolmaster who spent his life trying to persuade ordinary Americans to rethink their relationship to the British empire’s mother tongue: the English language.