Lincoln's Speeches ReconsideredJohns Hopkins University Press, 16.06.2005 - 386 Seiten Originally published in 2005. Throughout the fractious years of the mid-nineteenth century, Abraham Lincoln's speeches imparted reason and guidance to a troubled nation. Lincoln's words were never universally praised. But they resonated with fellow legislators and the public, especially when he spoke on such volatile subjects as mob rule, temperance, the Mexican War, slavery and its expansion, and the justice of a war for freedom and union. In this close examination, John Channing Briggs reveals how the process of studying, writing, and delivering speeches helped Lincoln develop the ideas with which he would so profoundly change history. Briggs follows Lincoln's thought process through a careful chronological reading of his oratory, ranging from Lincoln's 1838 speech to the Springfield Lyceum to his second inaugural address. Recalling David Herbert Donald's celebrated revisionist essays (Lincoln Reconsidered, 1947), Briggs's study provides students of Lincoln with new insight into his words, intentions, and image. |
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... territorial legislatures or specific electoral procedures would play . The author of the Kansas - Nebraska Act had managed to con- vince a majority in Congress that " popular sovereignty " would decide whether the new territories would ...
... territories : Our fathers , when they framed the government under which we live , under- stood this question just as ... territories if the federal government did not interfere ; but they also appealed to those seg- ments of the ...
... territories , not necessarily federal preference for slave - free territories . But the thrust of Lincoln's argumentation is clearly more ambitious : he wants to establish a case for the Founders ' careful attention to prohibition , not ...
Inhalt
Rhetorical Contexts | 1 |
On the Perpetuation of Our Political Institutions | 29 |
The Temperance Address | 58 |
Urheberrecht | |
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