Contents
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Views of Empire Views of Empire
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Oversized Landscapes Oversized Landscapes
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Taken with Accuracy Taken with Accuracy
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Surveying Philadelphia Surveying Philadelphia
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Refining Colonial Prospects Refining Colonial Prospects
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The Architecture of Civil Society The Architecture of Civil Society
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Gulliver’s Prospect Gulliver’s Prospect
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Subscribing to Civility Subscribing to Civility
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Local Views Local Views
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Touring the Colonies by Eye Touring the Colonies by Eye
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The Perils of Brobdingnag The Perils of Brobdingnag
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Compromises of Scale Compromises of Scale
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Belittling the Colonies Belittling the Colonies
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter explores a group of large city views, also known as long views, sponsored by local subscribers in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, and Charleston, and engraved in London. These prints perfected urban environments by eliminating spaces of unruly commerce and crime and celebrating residents’ architectural accomplishments. They contributed to colonists’ efforts to reduce the wilderness by adapting the prospect view and drawing upon the science of surveying. The views allowed subscribers to articulate their common goals for urban planning and hope for their cities’ growth. Intended for a British imperial audience, the prints also asserted colonial Americans’ civic growth and reminded British viewers of North America’s large size. Whereas English thinkers belittled America’s fauna and her land, colonial city views proclaimed North America’s magnitude.
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