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The American Stamp by Laura Goldblatt & Richard Handler (Columbia Uni Press) 3 stars

Publication date US 1/1/23 UK 31/1/23 book 336 pages


I would like to thank the author, publishers and Netgalley for allowing me to pick this to read and review. all my reviews are honest.




Synopsis


The postage stamp of the United States is a window into the ideology of American citizenship. Stamps differ from other repositories of nationalist messaging such as monuments, museums and textbooks. They are centrally controlled (by the post office), yet they change rapidly-more than three thousand different stamps have been deployed since the middle of the nineteenth century. The ubiquity of stamps in national life-and the fact that they change regularly yet remain controlled by a remarkably stable national agency-have made them a site where some of the deepest principles of U.S. national citizenship have been fixed, developed, deployed and challenged. The American Stamp is a study of the iconography and material history explores how the postage stamp has been a staging ground for a long-term debate concerning two views of U.S. citizenship, one centered on the freedoms afforded by democracy and the other on the freedoms afforded by consumerism. Stamps for most of the nineteenth century stuck to a political register, featuring a small cast of great men of politics and warfare. A decisive change occurred in connection with the World's Columbian Exposition held in Chicago in 1893, on which occasion the post office created the first U.S. "commemorative" stamps. These stamps celebrated the moment-the fair and the four hundredth anniversary of Columbus' voyage-but were not intended to stay in circulation or displace "regular issue" stamps. The creation of commemorative stamps opened the door to consumer choice as a driver of postal iconography. Interest groups soon learned to lobby the post office, and the post office began to think more seriously about the public not merely as citizens paying for postal services but as consumers buying government-issued souvenirs. With the postwar flowering of the consumer society, the post office issued more and more commemorative stamps. Since the iconography was intended to speak to issues of national history and identity, the consumer imperative of unlimited choice among similar alternatives came into tension with the democratic imperative of representing exemplary citizenship and its history"--


My Review


This book was certainly interesting to read. Not only do you get the story about the history of the stamps but a short history of the subjects and a history of the American postal service. I did find aspects of the book over simplified. Which surprised me for a university publisher. There was some repetition of points, but that could just be the review edition I had. I did like the pictures that were included it really helped break up the text. I really would of love to see them it colour, though. I certainly learnt a lot from reading this book. I recommend this book for those new to stamps or those who find the postal service interesting.

Many thanks to the author and publishers for bringing us this interesting read.

Where you can buy this book


Amazon US K $16.99, HC $37.27



Waterstones HC £28.00 OUT 1/2/23



Google Books EB £21.99



B&N HC $35.00, EB $26.49



Amazon UK K £20.07, HC £28.97 OUT 31/1/23



All prices are subject to change at any time. Please remember to review all books you finish reading so others can find these amazing books. All reviews help just remember not to tell people what the book is about as everyone has already read the synopsis. Just include what you liked and felt when reading the book.

HAPPY READING

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