Subject Area
History
Description
The goddess of wisdom and war models intellect without complacency, valor without rashness. Claiming this duality—a civilized militancy—from their patron goddess Athena, an ancient Athenian citizenry could rationalize imperial conquest as democratic goodwill. Millennia later, the United States, seeking subtle proclamation of classical succession, crafted their national personification Columbia from the mold of Athena. From the Civil War until the First World War, Americans called on Columbia to symbolically sanction and spectacularize their own imperial ascent. This paper explores the American adaptation of Greco-Roman rhetoric through the mediums of cartoons, sculptures, and paintings in order to reveal the ancient roots beneath the American paradox of liberty and empire, and the timeless appeal of the rational war goddess as patron of such political dualism. Through the wise and warlike Columbia, Americans employed the imperial ideology of their Athenian and Roman predecessors: intervention was protective, expansion was civilized, and national exceptionalism necessitated grand display.
Publisher
Providence College
Academic Year
2025-2026
Date
Spring 2026
Type
Thesis
Format
Text
.pdf (text under image)
Language
English
Start Date
3-21-2026 1:00 PM
