The Gettysburg Address: perspectives on Lincoln's greatest speech
(Book)
It remains without question the most memorable and memorized speech in American history. In 272 words, spoken on November 19, 1863, among the freshly dug graves of the Union dead at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, Abraham Lincoln evoked and distilled the profound significance of the terrible war in which the nation was engaged. This volume aims to place Lincoln's words in their full context. Edited by the country's leading scholars, including Sean Wilentz, Craig L. Symonds, and Harold Holzer, it approaches the Address from a number of fresh perspectives. Taken together, they show why in the century and a half since it was delivered, the Gettysburg Address has proven a seemingly inexhaustible source of somber reflection and soaring hope, its language echoed by those seeking meaning for their own struggles and sacrifices.
Notes
Conant, S., & Holzer, H. (2015). The Gettysburg Address: perspectives on Lincoln's greatest speech. New York, NY, Oxford University Press.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation (style guide)Conant, Sean and Harold, Holzer. 2015. The Gettysburg Address: Perspectives On Lincoln's Greatest Speech. New York, NY, Oxford University Press.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities Citation (style guide)Conant, Sean and Harold, Holzer, The Gettysburg Address: Perspectives On Lincoln's Greatest Speech. New York, NY, Oxford University Press, 2015.
MLA Citation (style guide)Conant, Sean, and Harold Holzer. The Gettysburg Address: Perspectives On Lincoln's Greatest Speech. New York, NY, Oxford University Press, 2015.
Record Information
Last Sierra Extract Time | Apr 16, 2024 05:52:50 AM |
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Last File Modification Time | Apr 16, 2024 05:53:14 AM |
Last Grouped Work Modification Time | Apr 16, 2024 05:52:58 AM |
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264 | 1 | |a New York, NY :|b Oxford University Press,|c [2015] | |
264 | 4 | |c ©2015 | |
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504 | |a Includes bibliographical references and index. | ||
505 | 0 | |a Part I. Influences -- Classical democracy and the Gettysburg Address / Nicholas P. Cole -- "We here highly resolve": the end of compromise and the return to revolutionary time / Robert Pierce Forbes -- Democracy at Gettysburg / Sean Wilentz -- Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln, and the Gettysburg Address / Craig L. Symonds -- "Of all, by all, for all": Theodore Parker, transcendentalism, and the Gettysburg Address / Dean Grodzins -- Death and the Gettysburg Address / Mark S. Schantz -- Shared suffering and the way to Gettysburg / Chandra Manning -- Little note, long remember: Lincoln and the murk of myth at Gettysburg / Allen C. Guelzo -- Part II. Impacts -- "A new birth of freedom": emancipation and the Gettysburg Address / Louis P. Masur -- "The great task remaining before us": Lincoln and Reconstruction / George Rutherglen -- Immigration and the Gettysburg Address: nationalism and equality at the gates / Alison Clark Efford -- Engendering the Gettysburg Address: its meaning for women / Jean H. Baker -- The Gettysburg Address and civil rights / Raymond Arsenault -- Widely noted and long remembered: the Gettysburg Address around the world / Don H. Doyle -- The search for meaning in Lincoln's great oration / Thomas A. Desjardin. | |
520 | |a It remains without question the most memorable and memorized speech in American history. In 272 words, spoken on November 19, 1863, among the freshly dug graves of the Union dead at Gettysburg, Pennsylvania, Abraham Lincoln evoked and distilled the profound significance of the terrible war in which the nation was engaged. This volume aims to place Lincoln's words in their full context. Edited by the country's leading scholars, including Sean Wilentz, Craig L. Symonds, and Harold Holzer, it approaches the Address from a number of fresh perspectives. Taken together, they show why in the century and a half since it was delivered, the Gettysburg Address has proven a seemingly inexhaustible source of somber reflection and soaring hope, its language echoed by those seeking meaning for their own struggles and sacrifices. | ||
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