Popular Culture Review Vol. 20, No. 1, Winter 2009 | Página 94

90 Popular Culture Review European, non-white people who would have been perceived during the 19lh century as exotic. Today, this definition expands to include any ethnic group that is considered to be different. Moreover, the photograph and postcard further objectify “Others” by presenting them “as static objects, rather than active subjects who possess the same desires and needs as the viewer.”37 The Amish become the modem day “Other” since their lifestyle is categorized as different, primitive, and therefore, exotic. The most frequent Amish postcard themes—farming with mules, riding in buggies, building bams, or shopping for produce—appear to be authentic images of everyday life, not exotic events. These apparent uncomplicated aspects of the Amish lifestyle, however, are truly romanticized by tourists. The postcard photos reinforce this romanticism. It is the element of “authenticity” that makes the seemingly quotidian image into something exotic. In “Postcards—Greetings From Another World,” Elizabeth Edwards explains this complex notion: “Postcards of the everyday suggest a level of intimacy of experience which appeals directly to the tourist’s desire for the authentic.”3®Tourists believe that they are experiencing something historical in a modem world—a quaint lifestyle—making the Amish “actors” into a kind of agrarian diorama. The photograph and constructed reality Postcards are constructed visions that fulfill the fantasies of consumers and tourists. Historically, the postcard has appealed to popular taste by perpetuating and reinforcing the previously established aesthetic standards. In short, Amish postcards are carefully crafted to project a traditional (and predictable) Amish “image.” In Amish picture postcards, the sky is always blue, the grass is always green, and the people are always hardworking and happy. These highly idealized images allow the viewer to replace the Amish individual with a fictional character. The postcard transforms the Amish into the stereotypical “Pennsylvania Dutch Amish” or the “Lancaster County Amish” that tourists have come to expect. The countryside around Lancaster is a tourist destination well recognized in promoting the state. Near the population centers of Philadelphia, Baltimore, and even New York, the Dutch Country is an easy drive. Modern-day visitors are enthralled by the covered bridges, horse-drawn buggies, and prosperous farms operated by the “plain people” without benefit of gasoline, electricity, or other modem conveniences.39 This benign description from Tom Range’s postcard history on the Amish (2002) illustrates how even recent literature on the Amish continues to tout Lancaster County as a utopia that “enthralls” its visitors. Ever since the 1930s and ’40s, such romantic writing about the region has changed very little from the earlier National Geographic descriptions of the county when it was called “a garden spot of America” and the “Land of Milk and Honey.”40