Eric FonerThe Story of American Freedom"Eric Foner's brilliant, important book . . . shows how, having invoked liberty to justify their independence in 1776, Americans have fought ever since over what that freedom means and who may enjoy its blessings."Los Angeles Times Book Review
From the Revolution to our own time, freedom has been America's strongest cultural bond and its most perilous fault line, a birthright for some Americans and a cruel mockery for others. Eric Foner takes freedom not as a timeless truth but as a value whose meaning and scope have been contested throughout American history. His sweeping narrative shows freedom to have been shaped not only in congressional debates and political treatises but also on plantations and picket lines, in parlors and bedrooms. His characters include the well-known-Thomas Jefferson, Frederick Douglass, Franklin D. Roosevelt, and Ronald Reagan-and the anonymous-former slaves, union organizers, freedom riders, and women's rights advocates. In the end he gives us a stirring history of America itself focused on its animating impulse: freedom.
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Eric Foner, DeWitt Clinton Professor of History at Columbia University, is the prize-winning author of many books, including the landmark work Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution and A House Divided: America in the Age of Lincoln, available in Norton paperback. 1999 / paper / ISBN 0-393-31962-8 / 5 1/2" X 8 1/4" / 448 pages / HISTORY/UNITED STATES | |||||
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