Westward Ho!
Author | : James Kirke Paulding |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 216 |
Release | : 1832 |
Genre | : American literature |
ISBN | : |
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Author | : James Kirke Paulding |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 216 |
Release | : 1832 |
Genre | : American literature |
ISBN | : |
Author | : James Kirke Paulding |
Publisher | : Rowman & Littlefield |
Total Pages | : 164 |
Release | : 2003 |
Genre | : Drama |
ISBN | : 9780742534018 |
The Bucktails turns British disdain for their crude, uncivilized former colonists against the effete representatives of the Old Order. The Lion of the West, written more than a decade and a half later, not only scored a great popular success on both sides of the Atlantic but also supplied a template for the conventional portrait of the Westerner and for the humor of the Old South West.
Author | : James Kirke Paulding |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 360 |
Release | : 1825 |
Genre | : United States |
ISBN | : |
Author | : Paul E. Johnson |
Publisher | : Macmillan + ORM |
Total Pages | : 187 |
Release | : 2004-06-21 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 1466806168 |
A quarter-century after its first publication, A Shopkeeper's Millennium remains a landmark work--brilliant both as a new interpretation of the intimate connections among politics, economy, and religion during the Second Great Awakening, and as a surprising portrait of a rapidly growing frontier city. The religious revival that transformed America in the 1820s, making it the most militantly Protestant nation on earth and spawning reform movements dedicated to temperance and to the abolition of slavery, had an especially powerful effect in Rochester, New York. Paul E. Johnson explores the reasons for the revival's spectacular success there, suggesting important links between its moral accounting and the city's new industrial world. In a new preface, he reassesses his evidence and his conclusions in this major work.
Author | : Amos Lee Herold |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 167 |
Release | : 1966 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 9780404032470 |
Author | : Amos Lee Herold |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 200 |
Release | : 1926 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : |
A critical biography of James K. Paulding that tells the story of his life and varied writings and recounts the political, social, and literary circumstances in which he lived and worked.
Author | : Amos L. Herold |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : |
Release | : 1926 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 9780231884808 |
A critical biography of James K. Paulding that tells the story of his life and varied writings and recounts the political, social, and literary circumstances in which he lived and worked.
Author | : Larry E. Tise |
Publisher | : University of Georgia Press |
Total Pages | : 525 |
Release | : 1990-10-01 |
Genre | : History |
ISBN | : 0820323969 |
Probing at the very core of the American political consciousness from the colonial period through the early republic, this thorough and unprecedented study by Larry E. Tise suggests that American proslavery thought, far from being an invention of the slave-holding South, had its origins in the crucible of conservative New England. Proslavery rhetoric, Tise shows, came late to the South, where the heritage of Jefferson's ideals was strongest and where, as late as the 1830s, most slaveowners would have agreed that slavery was an evil to be removed as soon as possible. When the rhetoric did come, it was often in the portmanteau of ministers who moved south from New England, and it arrived as part of a full-blown ideology. When the South finally did embrace proslavery, the region was placed not at the periphery of American thought but in its mainstream.
Author | : Rufus Wilmot Griswold |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 730 |
Release | : 1873 |
Genre | : American poetry |
ISBN | : |