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A Tale of Two Cities: Warner and Marquand in Newburyport
Author(s) -
Ingersoll Daniel W.
Publication year - 1997
Publication title -
anthropology and humanism
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.153
H-Index - 17
eISSN - 1548-1409
pISSN - 1559-9167
DOI - 10.1525/ahu.1997.22.2.137
Subject(s) - yankee , alias , ethnography , portrait , art history , art , history , sociology , anthropology , computer science , database
Once upon a time, an ethnographer and a novelist happened to seek out the same city, walk the same streets, and encounter the same people. Each wrote a book depicting life as he saw it. What would the two portraits look like? What would each author succeed in capturing, from that "once upon a time"? More than half a century ago, ethnographer Lloyd Warner and novelist John Marquand frequented Yankee City, alias Clyde, alias Yankee Persepolis, alias Newburyport, Massachusetts. In Marquand's novel, protagonist banker and ethnographer meet. This article will explore the outcome of that chance meeting of fiction and social science.