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Reviews of Books
Revising the National Pantheon: The American
National Biography and Early American History
Scott E. Casper
| IN the summer of
1803, the recently widowed, thirty-nine-year-old Nikolai Petrovich
Rezanov set sail in charge of Russia's first round-the-world voyage.
Also designated the envoy plenipotentiary to Japan, Rezanov arrived
first in Nagasaki, Japan, where he spent the winter of 18041805
under house arrest. After his release in spring 1805, Rezanov sailed
for the Russian colonies in America, where he reorganized and expanded
the Kodiak school and expanded commerce with Boston fur traders.
He traveled to California the following year to obtain food. In
San Francisco, he negotiated trade relations with the Spanish authoritiesand
fell in love. Maria de la Concepcion, the fifteen-year-old daughter
of his host, apparently reciprocated Rezanov's affections. The couple
made plans to marry after Rezanov returned from Russia, but he died
of "a cruel fever" there. "The beautiful Concepcion remained touchingly
faithful to her sweetheart and, refusing to believe the tragic news,
patiently awaited the return of her beloved" and ultimately died
in a convent in 1857. Or so a Bret Harte poem, a 1906 novel, a 1970
Russian poem, and a rock opera would have it. 1
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| Most
of the 17,658 brief lives in the new American National Biography
(ANB) don't deal with Alaska or with Russian colonization,
and Rezanov's story, as told by Nikolai N. Bolkhovitinov, packs
more emotion than most. Nevertheless, it serves as a useful introduction
to how this new compendium redefines the national biographical project.
"American" and "national" imply the antecedents of all that has
become the United States, including early Alaska. A continent of
many nations' colonies, America before 1820 was a meeting ground
for Russians and Spaniards in California, not only English, French,
Dutch, and Native American people east of the Mississippi. "Biography"
does more than chronicle accomplishments; it can encompass both
purposeful storytelling and the history of stories told about its
subject. Thus Rezanov was both a representative of something larger"that
galaxy of Russian statesman [sic] . . . who, following Peter the
Great, saw vast prospects for Russia in the Far East, in North America,
and the whole North Pacific"and the protagonist in
a much-retold romantic saga. By this definition, biography is necessarily
revisionist, dependent on what the writer in a particular context
envisions as a "life story." In ways small and large, in its individual
portraits and in the vast gallery those portraits compose together,
American National Biography engages in re-imagining whose livesand
what storieshave shaped America. |
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