Freedom Just Around the Corner: A New American History: 1585-1828

Portada
Harper Collins, 2004 M03 30 - 638 páginas

A powerful reinterpretation of the founding of America, by a Pulitzer Prize -- winning historian "The creation of the United States of America is the central event of the past four hundred years," declares Walter McDougall in his preface to Freedom Just Around the Corner. With this statement begins McDougall's most ambitious, original, and uncompromising of histories. McDougall marshals the latest scholarship and writes in a style redolent of passion, pathos, and humor in pursuit of truths often obscured in books burdened with political slants.

From the origins of English expansion under Henry VIII to the founding of the United States to the rollicking election of President Andrew Jackson, McDougall rescues from myth or oblivion the brave, brilliant, and flawed people who made America great: women and men, native-born and immigrant; German, Latin, African, and British; as well as farmers, engineers, planters, merchants; Protestants, Freemasons, Catholics, and Jews; and -- last but not least -- the American scofflaws, speculators, rogues, and demagogues.

With an insightful approach to the nearly 250 years spanning America's beginnings, McDougall offers his readers an understanding of the uniqueness of the "American character" and how it has shaped the wide-ranging course of historical events. McDougall explains that Americans have always been in a unique position of enjoying "more opportunity to pursue their ambitions...than any other people in history." Throughout Freedom Just Around the Corner the character of the American people shines, a character built out of a freedom to indulge in the whole panoply of human behavior. The genius behind the success of the United States is founded on the complex, irrepressible American spirit.

A grand narrative rich with new details and insights about colonial and early national history, Freedom Just Around the Corner is the first installment of a trilogy that will eventually bring the story of America up to the present day -- story as epic, bemusing, and brooding as Bob Dylan's "Jokerman," the ballad that inspires its titles.

Dentro del libro

Contenido

Saint George and the Dragon
17
Planters Patroons and Puritans
38
Barbadians Yorkers and Quakers
71
Papists Witches Scofflaws and Preachers
99
Germans Four Sorts of Britons and Africans
136
Soldiers Speculators and Savages
168
Sons of Liberty and TwoBottle Tyrants
202
Patriots Tories Slackers and Spies
239
Reluctant Nationalists Eager Imperialists
371
Engineers Pioneers Peddlers and Democrats
422
Travelers
492
Apotheosis and Apocalypse in American Culture c 1830
498
Notes
515
Physiographic Map of the United States 41
527
North America East of the Mississippi in 1763 199
557
Ratifying the Federal Constitution 309
565

Federalists Antis Vestals and Victims
280
Master Builders Party Men and a Rogue
321
Slavery in the United States 1821
597
Derechos de autor

Otras ediciones - Ver todas

Términos y frases comunes

Acerca del autor (2004)

A professor of history at the University of Pennsylvania, Walter A. McDougall is the author of many books, including the Pulitzer Prize-winning The Heavens and the Earth and Let the Sea Make a Noise.... He lives in Pennsylvania with his wife and two teenage children.

Información bibliográfica