Contents
List of Illustrations
List of Tables
Introduction: America’s Jewel in the Crown
Robert W. Rydell
1. “The Great American Desert Is No More”
Sarah J. Moore
2. The Trans-Mississippi and International Exposition Commemorative
Stamp Issue
Bonnie M. Miller
3. Women and Art in the Passing Show
Wendy Jean Katz
4. Trilby Goes Naked and Native on the Midway
Emily Godbey
5. Condensed Loveliness
Tracey Jean Boisseau
6. Indigenous Identities in the Imperialist Imagination
Akim Reinhardt
7. Exposition Anthropology
Nancy J. Parezo
8. Hawaiʻi and the Philippines at the Omaha Expositions
Stacy L. Kamehiro and Danielle B. Crawford
Afterword: The Art of the Historian
Timothy Schaffert
Selected Bibliography
Contributors
Index
Wendy Jean Katz is an associate professor of art history at
the University of Nebraska–Lincoln. She is the author of
Regionalism and Reform: Art and Class Formation in Antebellum
Cincinnati and the coeditor of Regionalism and the Humanities
(Nebraska, 2009).
“[The contributors] demonstrate exceptional skill in interrogating
the overlapping discourses of Whiteness and gender at the fairs. .
. . Taken all together, perhaps this volume’s greatest strength is
the consistent excellence of each scholar’s granular attention to
detail aligned with tightly organized analysis such that each
object in the metaphorical department store window feels necessary
to the overall picture, never overfurnished.”—Madison L. Heslop,
Western Historical Quarterly
"[The Trans-Mississippi and International Expositions of
1898–1899] provides a significant addition of high-quality
scholarly work to a fascinating topic, and does what good
scholarship should do. It opens multiple conversations and lines of
inquiry that will surely lead in any number of new
directions."—Rachel McLean Sailor, Great Plains Quarterly
"This edited collection deserves a serious look among scholars
seeking to explore a host of themes in the Gilded Age and
Progressive Era, from Native American history and Victorian
femininity to imperialism and consumerism. Hopefully, Katz's
commendable collection will inspire future work on other fairs
that have too long been in the shadow of Chicago."—Michael S.
Powers, H-SHGAPE
"[The Trans-Mississippi and International Expositions of
1898–1899] contains a number of interesting, readable, and
important essays."—James Gilbert, Journal of American
History
"This is a strong edited collection that will interest art
historians, world's fairs scholars, indigenous studies researchers,
and cultural and social historians of empire."—Nathan
Cardon, Journal of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era
"[The Trans-Mississippi and International Expositions of
1898–1899] contributes fruitfully to the growing body of
scholarship on popular culture that informs and enriches our
understanding of the "fine arts" of the period."—Kimberly
Orcutt, Panorama: Journal of the Association of Historians of
American Art
“This is an excellent collection that offers insight into the
social and cultural history of these Omaha fairs and into the
way that popular culture offered a venue for the construction of
both U.S. imperial aims and regional identity during the
Progressive Era.”—Abigail Markwyn, associate professor of history
at Carroll University and author of Empress San Francisco: The
Pacific Rim, the Great West, and California at the Panama-Pacific
International Exposition
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