The Gettysburg Address
Perspectives on Lincoln's Greatest Speech
Herausgeber: Conant, Sean
The Gettysburg Address
Perspectives on Lincoln's Greatest Speech
Herausgeber: Conant, Sean
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The country's most prominent historians reflect on the significance and legacy of the Gettysburg Address
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The country's most prominent historians reflect on the significance and legacy of the Gettysburg Address
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: OUP US
- Seitenzahl: 370
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Mai 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 562g
- ISBN-13: 9780190227456
- ISBN-10: 0190227451
- Artikelnr.: 47863777
- Verlag: OUP US
- Seitenzahl: 370
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Mai 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 20mm
- Gewicht: 562g
- ISBN-13: 9780190227456
- ISBN-10: 0190227451
- Artikelnr.: 47863777
Sean Conant is a documentary filmmaker. He is the writer, producer, and director of the major documentary film "The Gettysburg Address", to be released in 2015.
* Preface
* SEAN CONANT
* Foreword
* JAMES M. McPHERSON
* Part I: Influences
* 1. Classical Democracy and the Gettysburg Address
* NICHOLAS P. COLE
* 2. Shakespeare, Religion, and the Gettysburg Address
* JOHN STAUFFER
* 3. "We Here Highly Resolve": The End of Compromise and the Return to
Revolutionary Time
* ROBERT PIERCE FORBES
* 4. Democracy at Gettysburg
* SEAN WILENTZ
* 5. Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln, and the Gettysburg Address
* CRAIG L. SYMONDS
* 6. Theodore Parker, Transcendentalism, and the Gettysburg Address
* DEAN GRODZINS
* 7. Death and the Gettysburg Address
* MARK S. SCHANTZ
* 8. Shared Suffering and the Way to Gettysburg
* CHANDRA MANNING
* 9. Little Note, Long Remember: Lincoln and the Murk of Myth at
Gettysburg
* ALLEN GUELZO
* Part II: Impacts
* 10. "A New Birth of Freedom": Emancipation and the Gettysburg Address
* LOUIS P. MASUR
* 11. "The Great Task Remaining Before Us": Lincoln and Reconstruction
* GEORGE RUTHERGLEN
* 12. Immigration and the Gettysburg Address: Nationalism and Equality
at the Gates
* ALISON CLARK EFFORD
* 13. Engendering the Gettysburg Address: Its Meaning for Women
* JEAN H. BAKER
* 14. The Gettysburg Address and Civil Rights
* RAY ARSENAULT
* 15. Widely Noted and Long Remembered: The Gettysburg Address Around
the World
* DON H. DOYLE
* 16. The Search for Meaning in Lincoln's Great Oration
* THOMAS A. DESJARDIN
* Afterword
* HAROLD HOLZER
* Appendix: The Five Copies of The Gettysburg Address
* Acknowledgments
* Contributors
* SEAN CONANT
* Foreword
* JAMES M. McPHERSON
* Part I: Influences
* 1. Classical Democracy and the Gettysburg Address
* NICHOLAS P. COLE
* 2. Shakespeare, Religion, and the Gettysburg Address
* JOHN STAUFFER
* 3. "We Here Highly Resolve": The End of Compromise and the Return to
Revolutionary Time
* ROBERT PIERCE FORBES
* 4. Democracy at Gettysburg
* SEAN WILENTZ
* 5. Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln, and the Gettysburg Address
* CRAIG L. SYMONDS
* 6. Theodore Parker, Transcendentalism, and the Gettysburg Address
* DEAN GRODZINS
* 7. Death and the Gettysburg Address
* MARK S. SCHANTZ
* 8. Shared Suffering and the Way to Gettysburg
* CHANDRA MANNING
* 9. Little Note, Long Remember: Lincoln and the Murk of Myth at
Gettysburg
* ALLEN GUELZO
* Part II: Impacts
* 10. "A New Birth of Freedom": Emancipation and the Gettysburg Address
* LOUIS P. MASUR
* 11. "The Great Task Remaining Before Us": Lincoln and Reconstruction
* GEORGE RUTHERGLEN
* 12. Immigration and the Gettysburg Address: Nationalism and Equality
at the Gates
* ALISON CLARK EFFORD
* 13. Engendering the Gettysburg Address: Its Meaning for Women
* JEAN H. BAKER
* 14. The Gettysburg Address and Civil Rights
* RAY ARSENAULT
* 15. Widely Noted and Long Remembered: The Gettysburg Address Around
the World
* DON H. DOYLE
* 16. The Search for Meaning in Lincoln's Great Oration
* THOMAS A. DESJARDIN
* Afterword
* HAROLD HOLZER
* Appendix: The Five Copies of The Gettysburg Address
* Acknowledgments
* Contributors
* Preface
* SEAN CONANT
* Foreword
* JAMES M. McPHERSON
* Part I: Influences
* 1. Classical Democracy and the Gettysburg Address
* NICHOLAS P. COLE
* 2. Shakespeare, Religion, and the Gettysburg Address
* JOHN STAUFFER
* 3. "We Here Highly Resolve": The End of Compromise and the Return to
Revolutionary Time
* ROBERT PIERCE FORBES
* 4. Democracy at Gettysburg
* SEAN WILENTZ
* 5. Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln, and the Gettysburg Address
* CRAIG L. SYMONDS
* 6. Theodore Parker, Transcendentalism, and the Gettysburg Address
* DEAN GRODZINS
* 7. Death and the Gettysburg Address
* MARK S. SCHANTZ
* 8. Shared Suffering and the Way to Gettysburg
* CHANDRA MANNING
* 9. Little Note, Long Remember: Lincoln and the Murk of Myth at
Gettysburg
* ALLEN GUELZO
* Part II: Impacts
* 10. "A New Birth of Freedom": Emancipation and the Gettysburg Address
* LOUIS P. MASUR
* 11. "The Great Task Remaining Before Us": Lincoln and Reconstruction
* GEORGE RUTHERGLEN
* 12. Immigration and the Gettysburg Address: Nationalism and Equality
at the Gates
* ALISON CLARK EFFORD
* 13. Engendering the Gettysburg Address: Its Meaning for Women
* JEAN H. BAKER
* 14. The Gettysburg Address and Civil Rights
* RAY ARSENAULT
* 15. Widely Noted and Long Remembered: The Gettysburg Address Around
the World
* DON H. DOYLE
* 16. The Search for Meaning in Lincoln's Great Oration
* THOMAS A. DESJARDIN
* Afterword
* HAROLD HOLZER
* Appendix: The Five Copies of The Gettysburg Address
* Acknowledgments
* Contributors
* SEAN CONANT
* Foreword
* JAMES M. McPHERSON
* Part I: Influences
* 1. Classical Democracy and the Gettysburg Address
* NICHOLAS P. COLE
* 2. Shakespeare, Religion, and the Gettysburg Address
* JOHN STAUFFER
* 3. "We Here Highly Resolve": The End of Compromise and the Return to
Revolutionary Time
* ROBERT PIERCE FORBES
* 4. Democracy at Gettysburg
* SEAN WILENTZ
* 5. Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln, and the Gettysburg Address
* CRAIG L. SYMONDS
* 6. Theodore Parker, Transcendentalism, and the Gettysburg Address
* DEAN GRODZINS
* 7. Death and the Gettysburg Address
* MARK S. SCHANTZ
* 8. Shared Suffering and the Way to Gettysburg
* CHANDRA MANNING
* 9. Little Note, Long Remember: Lincoln and the Murk of Myth at
Gettysburg
* ALLEN GUELZO
* Part II: Impacts
* 10. "A New Birth of Freedom": Emancipation and the Gettysburg Address
* LOUIS P. MASUR
* 11. "The Great Task Remaining Before Us": Lincoln and Reconstruction
* GEORGE RUTHERGLEN
* 12. Immigration and the Gettysburg Address: Nationalism and Equality
at the Gates
* ALISON CLARK EFFORD
* 13. Engendering the Gettysburg Address: Its Meaning for Women
* JEAN H. BAKER
* 14. The Gettysburg Address and Civil Rights
* RAY ARSENAULT
* 15. Widely Noted and Long Remembered: The Gettysburg Address Around
the World
* DON H. DOYLE
* 16. The Search for Meaning in Lincoln's Great Oration
* THOMAS A. DESJARDIN
* Afterword
* HAROLD HOLZER
* Appendix: The Five Copies of The Gettysburg Address
* Acknowledgments
* Contributors