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Daguerreotyping the National Soul: The Portraits of Southworth and Hawes, 1843–1860
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 30 July 2009
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In 1837, two years before the nation began its exuberant love affair with daguerreotype portraits, Nathaniel Hawthorne made a prophetic observation about Americans' problematic obsession with “true” likenesses. In his story, “The Prophetic Pictures,” an unnamed, colonial Boston portrait painter portrayed not merely a man's features, “but his mind and heart.” The painter, as Walter Ludlow tells his fiancée Elinor, “catches the secret sentiments and passions, and throws them upon the canvas, like sunshine – or perhaps, in the portraits of dark-souled men, like a gleam of infernal fire. It is an awful gift.” Other colonists deemed the painter's gift “an offense against the Mosaic law, and even a presumptuous mockery of the Creator,” and still others considered him “a magician, or perhaps the famous Black Man, of old witch times, plotting mischief in a new guise.”
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This essay was first written for a Yale University graduate seminar with Alan Trachtenberg, whose guidance and support have been invaluable. Thanks also to John Wood, Susanna Blumenthal, Eric Papenfuse, Kevin Parks, Wendell Gibson, John Flukes, and Deborah Hornblow for their careful readings, insightful comments, and encouragement.
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22. Because so few of Southworth and Hawes's daguerreotypes are dated, it is impossible to trace the incremental change in emphasis from sincerity to theatricality based on the images themselves. But all the images shown and discussed here, and the large bulk of Southworth and Hawes's daguerreotype production, occurred between 1843 and 1860. I have selected images for discussion based on representativeness and “richness” in the hidden or implied text in the image. As with all texts, there are perhaps infinite interpretations. My reading reflects the historical context and ways of representing identity in antebellum culture.
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