Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's Evangeline: A Tale of Acadie and the Ambiguous Afterlife of the History of the Acadians

Affiliation auteursAffiliation ok
TitreHenry Wadsworth Longfellow's Evangeline: A Tale of Acadie and the Ambiguous Afterlife of the History of the Acadians
Type de publicationJournal Article
Year of Publication2018
AuteursNiemeyer M
JournalCANADIAN REVIEW OF AMERICAN STUDIES
Volume48
Pagination121-145
Date PublishedSUM
Type of ArticleArticle
ISSN0007-7720
Mots-clésAcadians, cultural nationalism, Evangeline, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, history
Résumé

Longfellow's Evangeline was hailed as a great and distinctively American work when it appeared in 1847, and the poem's use of North American history was a key element in its favourable reception. This use of history, however, is ambiguous and complex. The epic continues, first of all, in a long tradition of romanticized retellings of the heart-rending story of the Acadians. But the work also engages in a dual-level dialogue with both the mid-eighteenth-century history of the Acadians, who are pitied, without inciting indignation, and the contemporary history of midnineteenth-century America, whose expansionism it both implicitly celebrates and criticizes.

DOI10.3138/cras.2017.003