Overview
In 1876 the abolitionist Frederick Douglass observed, "No man can say anything that is new of Abraham Lincoln." Undeterred, the contributors to Our Lincoln believe it is possible even now, especially if the starting point is the interaction between the life and the times.Several of these original essays focus on Lincoln's leadership as president and commander in chief. James M. McPherson examines Lincoln's deft navigation of the crosscurrents of politics and wartime strategy. Sean Wilentz assesses Lincoln's evolving position in the context of party politics. On slavery and race, Eric Foner writes of Lincoln and the movement to colonize emancipated slaves outside the United States. James Oakes considers Lincoln's views on race and citizenship. There are also brilliant essays on Lincoln's literary style, religious beliefs, and family life. The Lincoln who emerges is a man of his time, yet able to transcend and transform itβa reasonable measure of greatness.
Synopsis
Our best historians offer fresh insights on Abraham Lincoln and his time to mark the upcoming bicentennial of Lincoln's birth.
Randall M. Miller - Library Journal
Foner (DeWitt Clinton Professor of History, Columbia Univ.; Reconstruction) has assembled a stellar cast of historians to reconnect Lincoln's life to Lincoln's own times. In doing so, the authors collectively situate Lincoln's ideas, interests, and policies and the meanings various people from abolitionists to neo-Confederates have found in Lincoln, from the microscopic to a wider historical context of politics, culture, and memory. Essays explore such topics as presidential leadership, civil liberties, citizenship and rights, democratic politics, mass-produced imagery, African colonization, antislavery, race, religion, family life, writing sensibilities and style, and the need to claim Lincoln for one's own cause. The eloquent and compelling results show how and why Lincoln was both a man of his time and a man for all time. There is no better introduction to the complexities, contradictions, and consequences of this man's life and to why he still holds a spell over America and the world. Essential. [See Prepub Alert, LJ6/1/08.]
Editorials
Library Journal
Foner (DeWitt Clinton Professor of History, Columbia Univ.; Reconstruction) has assembled a stellar cast of historians to reconnect Lincoln's life to Lincoln's own times. In doing so, the authors collectively situate Lincoln's ideas, interests, and policies and the meanings various people from abolitionists to neo-Confederates have found in Lincoln, from the microscopic to a wider historical context of politics, culture, and memory. Essays explore such topics as presidential leadership, civil liberties, citizenship and rights, democratic politics, mass-produced imagery, African colonization, antislavery, race, religion, family life, writing sensibilities and style, and the need to claim Lincoln for one's own cause. The eloquent and compelling results show how and why Lincoln was both a man of his time and a man for all time. There is no better introduction to the complexities, contradictions, and consequences of this man's life and to why he still holds a spell over America and the world. Essential. [See Prepub Alert, LJ6/1/08.]
βRandall M. Miller