This is an exceptional work. I got through all 704 pages in roughly a month's time. I took away one star from my review for Kammen's frequently challenging narrative style--but when he hits one home, boy does he ever knock it way out of the park. The book is full of valuable nuggets about cultural construction and the use of/prevalence of myth in American society. The gleaning of salient points from the storied lives of individuals such as Bernard DeVoto, Zora Neale Hurston, Edith Halpert, Allen Tate, Robert Penn Warren, Thomas Hart Benton, Ezra Meeker and Charles Francis Adams were illuminating in the fullest sense of the word.
I will give the reader two of my favorite and most telling quotes from this book:
1st the short quote attributed to Oliver Wendell Holmes, "We live by symbols."
The 2nd quote is slightly longer,
"(Edith) Halpert and one of the artists she 'handled', Charles Sheeler, are especially interesting because they exemplify so forcefully that traditionalism and modernism were not mutually exclusive. Halpert and Sheeler not only valued both impulses, but successfully connected the two and used each one to reinforce the other. Both of them believed that early American handicrafts and folk art anticipated trends in contemporary design..."
I gained an understanding of the historic preservation movement and the general democratization of tradition from this book. If you have an interest in symbol or myth and so called useable pasts-then you may like this book.
When I was in undergrad this book retained a cult-like status, now I know why.