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United States Historiography, United States History - Study & Teaching, Historians - Biography, American Colonial History - General & Miscellaneous, Frontier & Pioneer Life - Western United States, 19th Century US Westward Migration & Development - Genera
Frederick Jackson Turner : Strange Roads Going Down by Allan G. Bogue β€” book cover

Frederick Jackson Turner : Strange Roads Going Down

by Allan G. Bogue
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Overview

This biography examines the life and legacy of Frederick Jackson Turner. Best known for his 1893 essay "The Significance of the Frontier in American History" - the most enduring explanation of our national development - Turner was a leader in establishing the field of western American history and in shaping the broader history discipline. Placing Turner's ideas in the context both of his own times and of current historiography, Allan G. Bogue elucidates his far-reaching influence as thinker, scholar, mentor, and teacher. Weaving together accounts of Turner's personal and professional life, Bogue addresses intriguing questions: Why did Turner fail to produce that great work of substantive research on which he labored for more than half his career? And why have his ideas inspired so much debate and controversy, even to this day?

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Editorials

Booknews

Cognizant of revisionist historians' reproach of Turner's philosophy set forth in his seminal 1893 essay, "The Significance of the Frontier in American History," as promoting an exploitationist myth of the West, Bogue (history, U. of Wisconsin-Madison) weighs this eminent historian's legacy in the context of his biography. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.

Kirkus Reviews

A biography of Turner, whose famous thesis, "The Significance of the Frontier in American History," is known to generations of American history students. Bogue, emeritus professor of history at the University of Wisconsin, Madison, offers a comprehensive study of Turner, who was born in 1862 in Wisconsin farm country and eventually came to influence countless students who were specializing in the then emergent fields of Western and sectional history. According to Bogue, Turner was a rare and innovative scholar, as well as a popular teacher who devoted many of his hours to eager acolytes and students, despite the demands of his own prodigious research. His protβ€šgβ€šs remembered him not only as a teacher, but as a companion in the process of discovering history. Turner believed that historians should always strive for broad objective truth even while they were necessarily subject to shaping by their own prejudicial experiences within a specific culture, era, and geography. Bogue argues that Turner, who formed and developed schools of Western history at Wisconsin and Harvard, is comparable only to the great Francis Parkman and Henry Adams as a major eminence in American historiography. Also noted here is the fact that Turner believed the growing concentration of control of natural resources and industry by the government made American political discontent inevitable, compromising and tampering with the celebrated tradition of American individualism that had long been especially characteristic of the West. Later, Turner's many family and social obligations, professional pressures, and poor health delayed the writing of his final "big book." Bogue reveals that the historians who were his heirsbelieved that his frontier theory was overshadowed by other factors that were not given sufficient attention. Nevertheless, Turner's legacy lives on. A scholarly achievement, thick with details. (16 b&w photos, not seen)

Book Details

Published
December 31, 1998
Publisher
University of Oklahoma Press
Pages
576
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780806130392

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