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Knickerbocker:
The Myth behind New York
Deep within New York’s compelling, sprawling history lives an
odd, ornery Manhattan native named Diedrich Knickerbocker. The
name may be familiar today: his story gave rise to generations
of popular tributes—from a beer brand to a basketball team and
more—but Knickerbocker himself has been forgotten. In fact, he
was New York’s first truly homegrown chronicler, and as a
descendant of the Dutch settlers, he singlehandedly tried to
reclaim the city for the Dutch. Almost singlehandedly, that is.
Diedrich Knickerbocker was created in 1809 by a young Washington
Irving, who used the character to narrate his classic satire, A
History of New York. According
to Irving’s partisan narrator, everything good and distinctive,
proud and powerful, about New York City—from the doughnuts to
the twisting streets of lower Manhattan—could be traced back to
New Amsterdam.
Knickerbocker engagingly
traces the creation, evolution, and prevalence of Irving’s
imaginary historian in New York literature and history, art and
advertising, from the early nineteenth century to the present
day. Who would imagine this satiric character, at once a snob
and a champion of the people, would endure for two hundred
years- In Elizabeth L. Bradley’s words, “Whether you call it
‘blood,’ style, attitude, or moxie, the little Dutchman could
deliver.” And, from this engaging work, it is clear that he
does.
Bradley’s stunning volume offers a surprising and delightful
glimpse behind the scenes of New York history, and invites
readers into the world of Knickerbocker, the antihero who
surprised everyone by becoming the standard-bearer for the
city’s exceptional sense of self, or what we now call a New York
“attitude.” |