"Faced with rapid industrialization, burgeoning social conflict, and massive immigration, late-nineteenth-century New England elites embarked upon the construction of a national identity rooted in the imagined past of their own region. Julia Rosenbaum brilliantly charts how painters and sculptors, writers and intellectuals, economic elites and political players worked to define this identity, and how their imperial project eventually faltered on the shoals of the nation's emerging celebration of regional diversity. By mapping the changing relationship between regional and national identities at the moment of the emergence of modern America, Rosenbaum's beautifully written book is a major contribution to the history of American nationalism."