Abraham Lincoln, Statesman Historian
portes grátis
Abraham Lincoln, Statesman Historian
Derber, Jesse
University of Illinois Press
09/2024
280
Mole
9780252088100
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
Introduction
Chapter 1. A Living History (1809-39)
Chapter 2. The Emerging Historian (1839)
Chapter 3. History and Human Nature (1840-53)
Chapter 4. We Are Not What We Have Been (1854-56)
Chapter 5. The Logic of History: The Lincoln Douglas Debates (1857-58)
> Chapter 6. Right Makes Might: Lincoln's Address at Cooper Union (1859-60)
Chapter 7. The Mystic Chords of Memory (1861-62)
Chapter 8. We Cannot Escape History (1862-63)
Chapter 9. The Almighty Has His Own Purposes (1864-65)
Chapter 10. The Wisdom of History
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Chapter 1. A Living History (1809-39)
Chapter 2. The Emerging Historian (1839)
Chapter 3. History and Human Nature (1840-53)
Chapter 4. We Are Not What We Have Been (1854-56)
Chapter 5. The Logic of History: The Lincoln Douglas Debates (1857-58)
> Chapter 6. Right Makes Might: Lincoln's Address at Cooper Union (1859-60)
Chapter 7. The Mystic Chords of Memory (1861-62)
Chapter 8. We Cannot Escape History (1862-63)
Chapter 9. The Almighty Has His Own Purposes (1864-65)
Chapter 10. The Wisdom of History
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
George Bancroft; Young Men's Lyceum; Temperance Address; Communication to the People of Sangamo County; collective memory; Blackstone; Henry Clay; John Calhoun; Kansas-Nebraska Act; Stephen Douglas; Greenleaf; Isaac Watts; Niagara Falls; Mexican War; defalcation; sub-treasury; wisdom; William Knox; Declaration of Independence; Owen Lovejoy; David Hume; Eliza Gurney; Cooper Union; Dred Scott; Edwardsville; copybook; cyphering book; Frederick Douglass; primary source; Mystic Chords of Memory; human nature; mortality; suicide; Congress; Springfield; Peoria; Illinois State Fair; Princeton; Founders; cuttlefish; right makes might; almost chosen people; First Inaugural; Emancipation Proclamation; Antietam; we cannot escape history; Gettysburg Address; meditation on divine will; second inaugural; Reinhold Niebuhr
Introduction
Chapter 1. A Living History (1809-39)
Chapter 2. The Emerging Historian (1839)
Chapter 3. History and Human Nature (1840-53)
Chapter 4. We Are Not What We Have Been (1854-56)
Chapter 5. The Logic of History: The Lincoln Douglas Debates (1857-58)
> Chapter 6. Right Makes Might: Lincoln's Address at Cooper Union (1859-60)
Chapter 7. The Mystic Chords of Memory (1861-62)
Chapter 8. We Cannot Escape History (1862-63)
Chapter 9. The Almighty Has His Own Purposes (1864-65)
Chapter 10. The Wisdom of History
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Chapter 1. A Living History (1809-39)
Chapter 2. The Emerging Historian (1839)
Chapter 3. History and Human Nature (1840-53)
Chapter 4. We Are Not What We Have Been (1854-56)
Chapter 5. The Logic of History: The Lincoln Douglas Debates (1857-58)
> Chapter 6. Right Makes Might: Lincoln's Address at Cooper Union (1859-60)
Chapter 7. The Mystic Chords of Memory (1861-62)
Chapter 8. We Cannot Escape History (1862-63)
Chapter 9. The Almighty Has His Own Purposes (1864-65)
Chapter 10. The Wisdom of History
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
George Bancroft; Young Men's Lyceum; Temperance Address; Communication to the People of Sangamo County; collective memory; Blackstone; Henry Clay; John Calhoun; Kansas-Nebraska Act; Stephen Douglas; Greenleaf; Isaac Watts; Niagara Falls; Mexican War; defalcation; sub-treasury; wisdom; William Knox; Declaration of Independence; Owen Lovejoy; David Hume; Eliza Gurney; Cooper Union; Dred Scott; Edwardsville; copybook; cyphering book; Frederick Douglass; primary source; Mystic Chords of Memory; human nature; mortality; suicide; Congress; Springfield; Peoria; Illinois State Fair; Princeton; Founders; cuttlefish; right makes might; almost chosen people; First Inaugural; Emancipation Proclamation; Antietam; we cannot escape history; Gettysburg Address; meditation on divine will; second inaugural; Reinhold Niebuhr