Mugwumps

Mugwumps

Author: David M. Tucker

Publisher: University of Missouri Press

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 164

ISBN-13: 9780826211873

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A spirited reevaluation of the public moralists who shaped public policy in nineteenth-century America, Mugwumps: Public Moralists of the Gilded Age provides a refreshing look at a group of Americans whose importance to the history of our country has commonly been dismissed. A public interest group that labeled the generation following the American Civil War as the "Gilded Age," Mugwumps were college-educated individuals who lived the lessons of their moral philosophy--Christian values, republican virtue, and classical liberalism. Tracing Mugwump values back before the term was commonly used, Tucker defines these liberals as benevolent and altruistic, active campaigners against slavery and imperialism, and for sound money, lower tariffs, and civil service reform. The earliest Mugwumps took on the self- assigned task of advocating public principles over private interests. Evaluations of these public moralists during the 1950s and 1960s, however, did not paint the Mugwumps in so positive a light. Awash in the popular New Deal public policies that advocated positive government intervention and regulation in the economy, these studies dismissed Mugwump liberalism as outdated. More specifically, the reformers were criticized as being self-interested failures. Tucker obliges readers to look beyond such dismissals to the history and accomplishments of Mugwumps as a whole. Unlike previous historians, Tucker examines the antebellum roots of the Mugwumps and follows their ever-increasing participation in American government throughout the nineteenth century. Tucker portrays Mugwumps not as selfish agents of the middle class but as fascinating practitioners of eighteenth-century public virtue and nineteenth-century social science. This book forcefully challenges previous studies on the Mugwumps and restores these public moralists to the mainstream of nineteenth-century American history. Their concerns for morality and free-market economics are again fashionable in contemporary politics and deserving of fresh attention from both the general reader and the scholar.


Engines of Change

Engines of Change

Author: Daniel DiSalvo

Publisher: OUP USA

Published: 2012-04-20

Total Pages: 259

ISBN-13: 9780199891702

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This title provides an account of the role of national intra-party 'factions' in American politics. Drawing from the last 150 years of American political history, DiSalvo explains how factions have shaped the parties' ideologies, impacted presidential nominations, structured patterns of presidential governance, and much more.


The Nationalization of American Political Parties, 1880–1896

The Nationalization of American Political Parties, 1880–1896

Author: Daniel Klinghard

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2010-04-19

Total Pages:

ISBN-13: 1139488104

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This book investigates the creation of the first truly nationalized party organizations in the United States in the late nineteenth century, an innovation that reversed the parties' traditional privileging of state and local interests in nominating campaigns and the conduct of national campaigns. Between 1880 and 1896, party elites crafted a defense of these national organizations that charted the theoretical parameters of American party development into the twentieth century. With empowered national committees and a new understanding of the parties' role in the political system, national party leaders dominated American politics in new ways, renewed the parties' legitimacy in an increasingly pluralistic and nationalized political environment, and thus maintained their relevance throughout the twentieth century. The new organizations particularly served the interests of presidents and presidential candidates, and the little-studied presidencies of the late nineteenth century demonstrate the first stirrings of modern presidential party leadership.


Letters from the Southwest, September 20, 1884 to March 14, 1885

Letters from the Southwest, September 20, 1884 to March 14, 1885

Author: Charles Fletcher Lummis

Publisher: University of Arizona Press

Published: 1989

Total Pages: 376

ISBN-13: 9780816510399

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Lummis' other set of letters, to the Los Angeles times, are well-known as the basis for his A Tramp across the continent (Chas. Scribner's Sons, 1892). These are the 24 letters written to the Chillicothe Leader. They are more robust than the Times versions, which were more deliberately crafted, more commercial. An essential for Western collections. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR


William James at the Boundaries

William James at the Boundaries

Author: Francesca Bordogna

Publisher: University of Chicago Press

Published: 2008-12

Total Pages: 393

ISBN-13: 0226066525

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At Columbia University in 1906, William James gave a highly confrontational speech to the American Philosophical Association (APA). He ignored the technical philosophical questions the audience had gathered to discuss and instead addressed the topic of human energy. Tramping on the rules of academic decorum, James invoked the work of amateurs, read testimonials on the benefits of yoga and alcohol, and concluded by urging his listeners to take up this psychological and physiological problem. What was the goal of this unusual speech? Rather than an oddity, Francesca Bordogna asserts that the APA address was emblematic—it was just one of many gestures that James employed as he plowed through the barriers between academic, popular, and pseudoscience, as well as the newly emergent borders between the study of philosophy, psychology, and the “science of man.” Bordogna reveals that James’s trespassing of boundaries was an essential element of a broader intellectual and social project. By crisscrossing divides, she argues, James imagined a new social configuration of knowledge, a better society, and a new vision of the human self. As the academy moves toward an increasingly interdisciplinary future, William James at the Boundaries reintroduces readers to a seminal influence on the way knowledge is pursued.


Glorious Contentment

Glorious Contentment

Author: Stuart McConnell

Publisher: Univ of North Carolina Press

Published: 1997-02-01

Total Pages: 340

ISBN-13: 9780807846285

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The Grand Army of the Republic, the largest of all Union Army veterans' organizations, was the most powerful single-issue political lobby of the late nineteenth century, securing massive pensions for veterans and helping to elect five postwar presidents f


Essays on the Age of Enterprise, 1870-1900

Essays on the Age of Enterprise, 1870-1900

Author: David Brody

Publisher:

Published: 1974

Total Pages: 370

ISBN-13:

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The legend of the robber barons / Thomas C. Cochran -- The psychology and method of steelmaking / David Brody -- The beginnings of "big business" in American industry / Alfred D. Chandler -- The knights of labor and the trade unions, 1878-1886 / Gerald N. Grob -- The condition of the western farmer / Arthur F. Bentley -- Reconsidering the populists / Oscar Handlin -- Building American cities / Edward C. Kirkland -- The tenement comes of age / Roy Lubove -- Streecar suburbs / Sam B. Warner -- Urbanization, migration and social mobility / Stephan Thernstrom -- Middle-class families and urban violence / Richard Sennett -- Anna Howard Shaw : new approaches to feminism / James R. McGovern -- Bourbonism in Georgia / C. Vann Woodward -- Populist dreams and Negro rights : East Texas as a case study / Lawrence C. Goodwyn -- Booker T. Washington in biographical perspective / Louis R. Harlan -- The New York Mugwumps of 1884 : a profile / Gerald W. McFarland -- The political revolution of the 1890s : a behavioral interpretation / Paul Kleppner -- The new empire / Walter LaFeber -- William Graham Sumner, social Darwinist / Richard Hofstadter -- American Protestantism : from denominationalism to Americanism / Sidney E. Mead -- Sullivan's skyscrapers as the expression of nineteenth-century technology / Carl W. Condit.


Lula and His Politics of Cunning

Lula and His Politics of Cunning

Author: John D. French

Publisher: UNC Press Books

Published: 2020-09-21

Total Pages: 521

ISBN-13: 1469655772

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Known around the world simply as Lula, Luis Inacio Lula da Silva was born in 1945 to illiterate parents who migrated to industrializing Sao Paulo. He learned to read at ten years of age, left school at fourteen, became a skilled metalworker, rose to union leadership, helped end a military dictatorship—and in 2003 became the thirty-fifth president of Brazil. During his administration, Lula led his country through reforms that lifted tens of millions out of poverty. Here, John D. French, one of the foremost historians of Brazil, provides the first critical biography of the leader whom even his political opponents see as strikingly charismatic, humorous, and endearing. Interweaving an intimate and colorful story of Lula's life—his love for home, soccer, factory floor, and union hall—with an analysis of large-scale forces, French argues that Lula was uniquely equipped to influence the authoritarian structures of power in this developing nation. His cunning capacity to speak with, not at, people and to create shared political meaning was fundamental to his political triumphs. After Lula left office, his opponents convicted and incarcerated him on charges of money laundering and corruption—but his immense army of voters celebrated his recent release from jail, insisting that he is the victim of a right-wing political ambush. The story of Lula is not over.