Joseph Smith for President: The Prophet, the Assassins, and the Fight for American Religious Freedom
Autor Spencer W. McBrideen Limba Engleză Hardback – 9 sep 2021
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190909413
ISBN-10: 0190909412
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 239 x 157 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190909412
Pagini: 296
Dimensiuni: 239 x 157 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
McBride's analysis is both illuminating and interesting: an excellent choice for the classroom and deserving of attention from the general readership.
Overall, exploring Joseph Smith's White House run tells us about a new faith's struggle to survive, and it indicates the nineteenth century nation's next bend in the road to disunion. Far from a conventional presidential history, McBride's book offers us a welcome twist at the end, drawing readers closer to the diverse ideas of the many Americans deciding the country's fate.
This is a crucial historical and historiographical insight. Resting on a foundation of extensive primary source research and informed by sharp scholarly insight, McBride's book is a supremely accessible landmark study of Smith's presidential campaign.
McBride paints the story of Smith's doomed presidential campaign as an expression of frustration with the ideological and structural incentives that existed in American politics to uphold what McBride calls "systematic religious inequality".
McBride's narrative verve illustrates through anecdote and case study the reasons why the myth of religious freedom failed Joseph Smith
This is an applaudable case study of the fate of an unpopular religious minority with Protestantism as the de facto established church.
Joseph Smith for President is beautifully written and delivers throughout the correct amount of context without stalling the narrative flow, making it widely readable, yet incisively informative. McBride effectively engages his training and scholarship of the early republic and his extensive knowledge of the primary source material regarding Joseph Smith to create the most comprehensive exploration yet of Smith's presidential campaign in its wider American historical context.
Overall, McBride's excellent treatise using Joseph Smith's campaign as an "indispensable lens" on the "persistence of religious inequality in American society," delivers. For those studying antebellum intersections of religion and politics, particularly non-Protestant religions, this book is a must read.
In Spencer McBride's skilled hands, the story of Joseph Smith's quixotic 1844 presidential campaign reveals new aspects of the radically circumscribed nature of liberty in the American Republic. This marvelous volume combines a compelling history of the early LDS Church with a pointed critique of the myth of American religious freedom.
America has had no shortage of quixotic presidential candidates who, in retrospect, reflect broader cultural anxieties. But perhaps no campaign appeared as impractical or unlikely as the Mormon prophet Joseph Smith's in 1844. In this meticulously detailed and clearly written book, Spencer McBride has dissected this seemingly outlandish episode in order to reveal wider lessons about the American culture that made it possible as well as the political tradition that connects it to today.
Spencer McBride obliges us to see Joseph Smith in a stark new light: not merely as a prophet who was assassinated, but as a presidential candidate whose campaign could not be separated from the force of religious persecution. From this illuminating, deeply researched account emerges a picture of the dark underbelly of states' rights abuses and mob violence that shaped the election of 1844. It's a story well-suited to our own intolerant times.
Joseph Smith for President takes readers inside one of the most unlikely presidential campaigns in American history. Spencer McBride shows us Joseph Smith parading on the shoulders of his followers, issuing an anti-slavery platform, and asking to be put at the head of a 100,000-man army. This is an eloquent and richly detailed portrait of the political conflict between the early Latter-day Saints and their political opponents.
The history of Mormonism in the United States has long stood as an implicit rebuke to the nation's selfcelebration as a place of unfettered religious freedom. In this fascinating and gripping book, Joseph Smith for President, Spencer W. McBride uses the story of Mormonism's founder, Joseph Smith, to show how much the American experiment has come up short. Offering a narrative history set in the wider context of early nineteenth-century American democracy, McBride reveals the Mormon story interacting with all the weighty issues of the era, including the emergence of national citizenship rights and the incipient jurisdictional disputes between federal, state, and municipal governments.
Overall, exploring Joseph Smith's White House run tells us about a new faith's struggle to survive, and it indicates the nineteenth century nation's next bend in the road to disunion. Far from a conventional presidential history, McBride's book offers us a welcome twist at the end, drawing readers closer to the diverse ideas of the many Americans deciding the country's fate.
This is a crucial historical and historiographical insight. Resting on a foundation of extensive primary source research and informed by sharp scholarly insight, McBride's book is a supremely accessible landmark study of Smith's presidential campaign.
McBride paints the story of Smith's doomed presidential campaign as an expression of frustration with the ideological and structural incentives that existed in American politics to uphold what McBride calls "systematic religious inequality".
McBride's narrative verve illustrates through anecdote and case study the reasons why the myth of religious freedom failed Joseph Smith
This is an applaudable case study of the fate of an unpopular religious minority with Protestantism as the de facto established church.
Joseph Smith for President is beautifully written and delivers throughout the correct amount of context without stalling the narrative flow, making it widely readable, yet incisively informative. McBride effectively engages his training and scholarship of the early republic and his extensive knowledge of the primary source material regarding Joseph Smith to create the most comprehensive exploration yet of Smith's presidential campaign in its wider American historical context.
Overall, McBride's excellent treatise using Joseph Smith's campaign as an "indispensable lens" on the "persistence of religious inequality in American society," delivers. For those studying antebellum intersections of religion and politics, particularly non-Protestant religions, this book is a must read.
In Spencer McBride's skilled hands, the story of Joseph Smith's quixotic 1844 presidential campaign reveals new aspects of the radically circumscribed nature of liberty in the American Republic. This marvelous volume combines a compelling history of the early LDS Church with a pointed critique of the myth of American religious freedom.
America has had no shortage of quixotic presidential candidates who, in retrospect, reflect broader cultural anxieties. But perhaps no campaign appeared as impractical or unlikely as the Mormon prophet Joseph Smith's in 1844. In this meticulously detailed and clearly written book, Spencer McBride has dissected this seemingly outlandish episode in order to reveal wider lessons about the American culture that made it possible as well as the political tradition that connects it to today.
Spencer McBride obliges us to see Joseph Smith in a stark new light: not merely as a prophet who was assassinated, but as a presidential candidate whose campaign could not be separated from the force of religious persecution. From this illuminating, deeply researched account emerges a picture of the dark underbelly of states' rights abuses and mob violence that shaped the election of 1844. It's a story well-suited to our own intolerant times.
Joseph Smith for President takes readers inside one of the most unlikely presidential campaigns in American history. Spencer McBride shows us Joseph Smith parading on the shoulders of his followers, issuing an anti-slavery platform, and asking to be put at the head of a 100,000-man army. This is an eloquent and richly detailed portrait of the political conflict between the early Latter-day Saints and their political opponents.
The history of Mormonism in the United States has long stood as an implicit rebuke to the nation's selfcelebration as a place of unfettered religious freedom. In this fascinating and gripping book, Joseph Smith for President, Spencer W. McBride uses the story of Mormonism's founder, Joseph Smith, to show how much the American experiment has come up short. Offering a narrative history set in the wider context of early nineteenth-century American democracy, McBride reveals the Mormon story interacting with all the weighty issues of the era, including the emergence of national citizenship rights and the incipient jurisdictional disputes between federal, state, and municipal governments.
Notă biografică
Spencer W. McBride is an Associate Managing Historian of the Joseph Smith Papers Project and the author of Pulpit and Nation: Clergymen and the Politics of Revolutionary America. He has written about the evolving role of religion in American politics for the Washington Post and the Deseret News. He is also the creator and host of The First Vision: A Joseph Smith Papers Podcast.