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Paul VI: The First Modern Pope, by Peter Hebblethwaite

A thoughtful, highly-acclaimed biography of Giovanni Batista Montini, Paul VI, which sheds light on and powerfully underscores the personal and ecclesial sides of a man who brought modernity to the church.

  • Sales Rank: #1274904 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: Paulist Press
  • Published on: 1993-05
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 2.53" h x 6.24" w x 9.34" l,
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 749 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

From Publishers Weekly
In this scrupulous, densely detailed biography, veteran Vatican reporter Hebblethwaite ( John XXIII ) convincingly portrays Paul VI, pontiff from 1963 to 1978, as thoughtfully and judiciously engaged with the political, social and religious issues of the day. Though Hebblethwaite explores the background of Giovanni Battista Montini, born in 1897 in Brescia, Italy, the book is mainly an institutional history of the church and Montini's role in it, based on accounts from sources from several countries. As chaplain of a student movement, Montini opposed Fascism; he was a close adviser to Pope Pius XII during WW II and after; as Archbishop of Milan, he rebuilt the diocese and supported the ecclesiological changes of Pope John XXIII's Vatican II. As pope, Paul VI traveled the world, becoming the first pope to visit the U.S. and Africa; he committed the Church to working with the United Nations and was the first pope to take part in an ecumenical service. Paul VI, the author argues, had a more nuanced view of ethics than was suggested by the "Pope Bans Pill" headlines that summarized his 1968 encyclical letter on birth control, Humanae Vitae. Observing that many people, including Pope John Paul II, now criticize Paul VI, the author ably--though at too great length--defends his pontificate. Photos not seen by PW.
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal
A veteran Vatican reporter draws the reader through the sweeping events of the 20th century in this major biography of Giovanni Battista Montini, who followed John XXIII as Pope Paul VI (1963-78). The author truly admires his subject, "a good and holy man," while providing a balanced combination of history and skilled contemporary reportage. The Vatican on the international scene is as much the subject as is Montini, who, trained in canon law and diplomacy, quietly initiated and implemented much of the modernization that occurred with the Council of Vatican II. Quoting published and unpublished views of Paul VI, the author presents a picture of a church reformer who placed people over protocols, who was deeply contemplative despite life in the busy Curia, and who pleaded for peace before the UN. Historical objectivity is important to the author, who nevertheless inserts occasional pointed personal asides. Political and cultural giants of our century meet here in more than 700 pages, yet there is no waste of words. The book is informative, intellectually challenging, and highly recommended.
- Anna Donnelly, St. John's Univ. Lib., New York
Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews
A well-researched, sympathetic biography of the self-effacing pontiff who steered the Roman Catholic Church through the tumult of Vatican II. Legend has it that, as Cardinal Giovanni Battista Montini, Paul VI (1897-1978) was upbraided by Pope John XXIII for his ``Hamlet'' tendencies, and, indeed, during his own 15-year pontificate, Paul often suffered by comparison with his ebullient predecessor. But Hebblethwaite (In the Vatican, 1986, etc.), an ex- Jesuit and Vatican correspondent for the National Catholic Reporter, persuasively argues that Paul was ``the most naturally talented man to become pope in this century.'' Intellectual (the son of a liberal Italian journalist), friendly in one-to-one encounters, and unusually knowledgeable about the non-Catholic world, the young Montini became a valued aide of Pius XII in the Vatican's Secretariat of State, where he witnessed firsthand the Church's battles against Fascism and Communism. But after 18 years of selfless service, he unaccountably fell from favor and was kicked upstairs with an appointment as Archbishop of Milan. It was under John XXIII that Paul finally became a cardinal and, Hebblethwaite shows, the architect of the agenda that kept the Second Vatican Council from spiralling out of control. Paul's achievements as pontiff (ecumenical outreach to alienated churches; reform of the conservative Curia; greater expansion of the role of women in the Church; the balancing of collegial discussion with papal authority) are weighed against what the author sees as his mistakes (the bans on birth control and clerical matrimony; inability to disentangle messy Vatican finances, resulting posthumously in the Sindona banking scandal). Using interviews and a wealth of unpublished material, Hebblethwaite depicts Paul as a ``good and holy man,'' tireless missionary, eloquent advocate for the poor, and--despite the carping of later critics (and unlike Pope John Paul II)--a comparative font of tolerance toward dissenting theologians. An insightful account of a pope who rose above his deep self- doubts to become a pivotal figure in religious--and contemporary- -history. -- Copyright ©1993, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Most helpful customer reviews

5 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Slanted, but comprehensive biography
By J. Michael
This is a magisterial biography by a man who was widely regarded in his time as the foremost Vaticanologist in the English-speaking world. An ex-priest, a teacher and a journalist, Hebblethwaite was the consummate Vatican insider, who had also participated in the Second Vatican Council. A talented writer and researcher, as well as a man who- by virtue of his wide range of acquaintances and experiences- was a noted anecdotalist, Hebblethwaite wrote a truly great biography that is both informative and vivacious. As the Pope whose life and career are at the center of the radical upheaval in the modern Catholic Church, Paul VI has gotten a biography deserving of him.

Without slandering this book as an hagiography, it wouldn't be unjust to say that the liberal Hebblethwaite was a very fervent admirer of Paul VI. When Paul VI's actions and policies tended towards the left, the modern, the revolutionary (which was most of the time) Hebblethwaite's approval is almost slavish. When Paul VI favored a traditional or conservative personage or policy, such as with Humanae Vitae, then Hebblethwaite is disapproving and critical, and invariably posits that some conservative cleric "got to" his beloved Pope behind the scenes. While this is a scholarly and honest work, it is definitely not objective. There are well delineated liberal heroes and conservative villains in this book. Leo XIII, John XXIII, Paul VI, Cardinal Suenens: good. Pius X, Pius XII, Archbishop Levebvre, Cardinal Siri: bad. People are literally described as "notorious" based on their conservatism, or support for a conservative group, such as Opus Dei (whose founder, by the way, is a canonized saint.) He even casts aspersions on the truth of Sister Faustina's visions (who, by the way, is also a canonized saint and whose visions form the basis for an official feast day of the Church.) So, on the basis of this book, we can deduce that Hebblethwaite was a committed leftist ideologue. He valued the intellect and scorned spirituality, especially that of traditionally expressed piety. He favored radical change and hated tradition. So now that we know the author's slant, what is it exactly that we learn about his subject?

From his early manhood, Giovanni Montini (the future Paul VI) was a partisan of Revolt and Revolution in the Church. What we traditionalists fail to grasp is that the changes of the 1960s- in religion, politics and culture- didn't just happen overnight. The upheaval was long in coming, like an unknown malady that suddenly strangles a vital organ, and was brought about by men who had been born 50, 60 and 70 years before. Before Vatican II, this underground revolt against the Faith manifested itself here and there in theological battles mainly fought out of sight of the laity. As an example of this, Hebblethwaite talks about a fascinating controversy in Germany during World War II. In 1943, Archbishop Conrad Grober of Freiburg-im-Bresgau saw the growing danger and denounced the "lack of interest in natural theology, contempt for scholasticism, growing influence of Protestant theology, the ecumenical movement, the liturgical movement and the exaggerations of those who talked of the Church as Christ's Mystical Body." Such theologians as the archbishop had in mind, namely Dom Odo Casel and Romano Guardini, were favorites of the future Paul VI.

The young Montini (born in 1897) had a natural inclination to whatever was modern and new, an odd sentiment for a man whose putative religion was supposed to be based on immutable supernatural revelation, "once for all delivered to the saints". He himself wrote that "...perhaps our life is characterized more clearly than anything else by the love of our own time, and our own world." One would think that a Christian, let alone a priest, would want his life to be characterized by love of Christ above anything else, rather than for a modern world which possesses no moral absolutes and no eternal values. But Montini loved this world and the intellectual ferment of early 20th century Europe. Although he came from a strong Catholic family, his reason for becoming a priest is unclear. From what the author reveals, I detected no great piety or calling. Family connections soon got him into the Vatican school for diplomats and his high flying career was underway. Montini was very early on seduced by the incarnation of modernism known as the New Theology. The author admits that the French Dominicans and Jesuits who were the main proponents of this theology, and whose ideas were later condemned by Pope Pius XII as heresy in the encyclical Humani Generis, were Montini's "masters". Indeed, the men who promoted these errors, which were explicity and solemnly condemned by a Pope, were later elevated to positions of supreme influence during the Second Vatican Council. And still we are supposed to be believe that the Council changed nothing of importance in the Faith?

Montini was known to have read the forbidden books of these authors and was always familiar with the latest thoughts. His Protestant attitude toward the traditional manifestations of his faith can be seen in his offensive advice to the national Catholic student group in 1933, of which he was the chaplain. He advised the students, who were going home on their Easter break, to avoid churches with "too many plaster saints, pious old ladies, candles, flowers, shrines..." Even then he must have been looking forward to the stripped altars and geometric dungeons they call churches these days. As he rose in the Curia, his radicalism became evident. As early as 1950 he was known to harbor a desire to "reform" the Church. He was active in ecumenism, especially with Anglicans. He told the founder of Taize that "We must go towards you." Always, he advocated unilateral compromise and concessions by the Church, never by her Protestant, Jewish or atheist interlocutors. One Cardinal referred to the modernist Montini as a "danger" to the Church.

Nevertheless, the left wing in the Church had great plans for him and he was being spoken of as papabile even before he was made a Cardinal. Pius XII made Montini the archbishop of Milan in 1954. Hebblethwaite interprets this appointment as a sacking and an exile. This may very well be true. Although Montini was a great help to the Pope, Pius XII had to have known what he was all about and, in befuddling Vatican fashion, exiled him by promotion. As Archbishop, Montini distinguished himself by neglecting traditional Marian piety, disobediently wrote a preface to a book supporting the banned worker priests, and received media accolades for pandering to the proletariat. When John XXIII's first act as Pope was to make Montini a Cardinal, the succession was almost assured.

The subject of the changes of Vatican II and the post-conciliar church are outside the scope of my review, but suffice it to say that Paul VI fulfilled and built upon the radical vision of John XXIII. He nurtured the destructive Bugnini in completely Protestantizing the liturgy, he pandered to every non-Catholic religion or non-religion on earth, and tolerated and encouraged the promoters of innovation, dissent and heresy. And then, unbelievably, he expressed surprise about the fact that a "non-Catholic mentality was increasingly dominant in the Church" and wondered how the "Smoke of Satan" had wafted into the Sanctuary. Such comments lead one to believe that Paul was merely an ignorant dupe, rather than an active destroyer. Perhaps he really believed that all the changes would reinvigorate the Faith. The impression one gets from Hebblethwaite's account is that Paul was a weak-willed and naive man who feared confrontation and had an overwhelming desire to please and to be loved. The zeitgeist was clearly in favor of Revolution, and Paul accordingly played to that audience his entire life, receiving accolades from the forces that shaped public opinion. On only one issue did he buck the system, when he issued the encyclical Humanae Vitae in 1968.

In his affirmation of traditional Christian teaching on artificial contraception, Paul was viciously criticized by almost the whole world, religious and secular. At first glance, it does look like a very brave move, but I really don't think he had a choice. The key word is "affirmation". Since its earliest centuries, the Church has taught the immorality of artificial birth control. The teaching was solemnly re-affirmed several times by Popes in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, most importantly in Pope Pius XI's 1930 encyclical Casti Connubi, which was a response to the Anglican church's limited approval of birth control in that year. Until that year, even the Protestant world was in total agreement with Rome on the evil of contraception. So, in my opinion, the Pope really had no choice but to restate the traditional teaching. While Protestants, whose faith is based on the ever-shifting sands of personal Biblical interpretation, are always free to change their doctrines based on "evolving understanding" and "scientific revelations", the Catholic Church has no such luxury. If the Church has been promulgating a certain doctrine for 1900 years, then repealing that doctrine would totally undermine the Church's claim to infallible teaching authority. So, even if Paul wanted to allow birth control, he simply was unable to do so without destroying the very foundation of the Catholic Faith.

And yet I think Paul did, in his heart, want to revise Church teaching and be praised yet again for his "liberating" pontificate. He expanded and elevated John XXIII's Pontifical Commission on Birth Control, he stonewalled for 2 years after receiving the Commission's report, he delayed publication of the encyclical and supposedly revised it when liberals privately compained to him. But there was no other option. So, his actions showed that maybe he wasn't all bad. Or maybe it confirms that the Holy Spirit does come to the aid of His Church's Pontiff and does not let him teach error as truth.

Nevertheless, his and his successors' toleration of open dissent from priests, bishops and Cardinals, not to mention the near universal absence of this topic from Catholic pulpits and Catholic marriage preparation courses have achieved the exact same thing as official approval would have: it has ravaged society, destroyed the family, discredited the Church, caused countless millions to sin, prevented the birth of countless millions of Catholics, depopulated our countries (leading to the importation of millions of Moslem immigrants, especially in Europe), and ultimately greatly hindered the Great Commission of converting the world. As for the author, Hebblethwaite, he shows his colors again by claiming that the encyclical was not "infallible".

So, in short, I think it is a very good biography. If the author wears his ideology on his sleeve, he still presents a wealth of facts in great detail, and writes well.

31 of 37 people found the following review helpful.
A Good Book But It Has Its Problems...
By Shawn Tzu
...theologically anyway. But before dealing with that it would be beneficial to review its strengths.
For one thing, it is a comprehensive work. There is evidence throughout that the author sought to write as complete a biography as possible and clocking in at around 750 pages, the detail is not lacking. The portrait of Giovanni Battista Montini the man is well sketched and his gifts made readily apparent to the reader. The author believes that Pope Paul was "the most naturally talented man to become pope in this century" and if he is referring to all around then I can certainly concur with him. The problem though is that the papacy requires more then that to properly function. Paul from the biographies I have read of him - and Hebblethwaithe follows suit with them - sketches a portrait of a man who on paper is almost overqualified to be pope (if that was at all possible) excelling in his knowledge of Canon Law, the history of the Ecumenical Councils, and Church history in general. (Not to mention being schooled in the field of journalism.) An intellectual who could relate to average people, who was kind, compassionate, charitable, and longsuffering. (And from a pastoral standpoint a great priest.) Physically frail in health from his earliest years Paul VI was still able to accomplish much more then it would seem task-wise. An excellent listener who enjoyed philosophical discourse and dialogue with the belief that the truth would ultimately win out. A dialoguist who could weigh the pros and cons of opposing sides and do so equitably. Adding to these the element of patience and sensitivity of all viewpoints and Paul had the makings of a great diplomat.
Hebblethwaithe documents well Paul's service to - and admiration of - Pius XII and treats the latter pope reasonably well: though he seems to think Pius XI was a diplomatic blunderer. (There is a clear preference shown to John XXIII over both of them.) He details well Pope Paul's meetings with Patriarch Athengoras and other leaders both religious and secular. I am trying to think of what else can be said in under 1,000 words about a 750 page book. (In these situations space constraints are not of assistance.)
It has been said in the Conclave that after the election the consensus of him was that he was "John with Pacelli's [Pius XII] brains". But even taking into account all of the relevant factors, it is difficult to see how anyone could say that his reign could be anything better then "average" historically. Hebblethwaithe's sketch reveals the human side of Paul through his successes and also his failings. (Not to mention the tremendous sufferings physically and spiritually that he underwent in the exercise of his ministry.)
It helps now to know that the author is an "ex-Jesuit" because it fills in several question marks that cropped up when I read the book. His treatment of the subject of the minority at the Second Vatican Council is not as balanced as it could be. (The author almost makes it seem that any concessions made by Paul VI to the minority party was the result of conspiracy and certain prelates "getting to Paul" rather then Paul acting as he did out of a sense of personal principle.) The treatment of the Council could have been more thorough as well since that was the defining event and constant reference point for the rest of Pope Paul's pontificate.
There were a few points of theology where the author showed his grasp of the issues as specious. He makes two theological blunders by presuming that the Mystical Body and the Catholic Church affiliation would have to "be overcome by Vatican II" - an absurd notion and one not sanctioned by the documents of Vatican II. (The second was the assertion that the treatment of the Mystical Body in the encyclical somehow did not account for the presence of sin: another superficial commentary on the encyclical's content.) He also shows almost a disdain for the encyclical letter Mysterium Fidei: seemingly any attempt of the Pope to not endorse the "newer and therefore better" whatever it happened to be (and regardless of its relative merits) permeates this work in various spots.
Two more encyclicals that do not meet with the authors approval are Sacerdotalis Caelibatus (on priestly celibacy) and Humanae Vitae. On the latter the author pulls out the kind of kook conspiracy theories that are common to fringe extremists to try and "justify" themselves. (Particularly when it comes to Cardinal Ottaviani in this instance.) It is pretty clear that he did not like Paul's teaching in the latter two encyclicals or the judgment Paul had the CDF issue on women priests. The author for the most part is pretty fair but on the examples above there is a clear bias. The sketch he makes of Archbishop Marcel Lefebvre was also not flattering but frankly Lefebvre brought a lot of his problems on himself. (In that context Hebblethwaithe details Pope Paul's patience with Lefebvre very well.) Throughout the ups and downs of the book (which technically is written well and reads well) we receive a detailed sketch of Paul the pope and Montini the man.
In short, this is a good book but it is not without its problems. Two biographies not used by Hebblethwaithe are in this writers opinion superior works page for page. One is Roy MacGregor-Hastie's 1964 biography on Paul VI (approx. 210 pages). Another is Alden Hatch's biography "Pope Paul VI" which is about 400 pages. Either work is better then this one but this one is still worth a read too if you have the time and if deficiencies such as the ones noted above are taken into account.

1 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
More to Paul VI than at first thought
By Paul Burgin
Before reading this I tended to label Paul VI unfairly has a highly 'conservative' Pope who wrote 'Humane Vitae'. Having read this I realised that he wrote this encyledal partly because he thought he would be betraying the Church in the face of theological history and partly out of fear as to what it would lead to. He was also a highly complex man prone to fits of depression, and yet in some ways a warm and caring man. Like the US President Lyndon Johnson, Paul VI has suffered unfairly partly due to having a highly popular predessor. Sadly in Paul VI's case he also had a highly popular successor partly due to the shortness of his reign.

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# Get Free Ebook Thomas Paine and the Promise of America, by Harvey J. Kaye

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Thomas Paine and the Promise of America, by Harvey J. Kaye

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Thomas Paine and the Promise of America, by Harvey J. Kaye

Thomas Paine was one of the most remarkable political writers of the modern world and the greatest radical of a radical age. Through writings like Common Sense―and words such as "The sun never shined on a cause of greater worth," "We have it in our power to begin the world over again," and "These are the times that try men's souls"―he not only turned America's colonial rebellion into a revolutionary war but, as Harvey J. Kaye demonstrates, articulated an American identity charged with exceptional purpose and promise.

  • Sales Rank: #157883 in Books
  • Brand: Kaye, Harvey J.
  • Published on: 2006-07-25
  • Released on: 2006-07-25
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.50" h x .76" w x 5.50" l, .66 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 336 pages

From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Kaye offers a masterful and eloquent study of the man he reestablishes as the key figure in the American Revolution and the radical politics that followed it. Focusing on close readings of Paine's major writings, Kaye devotes the first half of the book to Paine's role in the seething fervor for American liberty and independence and his influence on the French Revolution. In Common Sense (1763), which sold 150,000 copies in just a few months, Paine advocated self-government and democracy in the colonies, accused the British of corruption and tyranny, and urged "Americans" to rebel. He championed representative democracy and argued that government should act for the public good. Paine's contributions were not limited to his own time; Kaye traces Paine's influence on American rebels and reformers from William Lloyd Garrison and Elizabeth Cady Stanton to Emma Goldman and Eugene Debs in the second half of his book. In 1980, Ronald Reagan quoted him—"We have it in our power to begin the world over again"—in his acceptance speech before the Republican National Convention. As historian Kaye (The American Radical) points out, Paine—"the greatest radical of a radical age"—would have been surprised to learn that conservatives, whose values he opposed, had used his words in their cause. 25 illus. not seen by PW. (Aug.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Facing a saturated market for biographies of Thomas Paine, historian Kaye opts to chronicle the effect of his legacy. Reading like a roll call of populists, reformers, and radicals, Kaye's presentation aims to repossess Paine from conservatives who "do not--and truly cannot--embrace him and his arguments." Kaye's audience may measure the assertion against the preliminary passages of this work, which outline Paine's life and paraphrase his revolutionary classics (Common Sense, The American Crisis, and The Age of Reason). Underscoring Paine's championing of exceptionalism, the idea of America's uniqueness in world history (which has conservative roots in Puritanism as well as in the radicalism espoused by Paine and preferred by Kaye), the author recounts Paine revivals that have coincided with reform movements. For a universalistic reach beyond a movement's immediate aims, Paine has been ready-made, and Kaye summarizes how Paine has inspired abolitionists, suffragettes, workingmen, socialists of the Progressive and New Deal eras, and historians. Gilbert Taylor
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Review

“The moment I finished this book (at four in the morning) I couldn't wait to call Harvey Kaye and leave a message that I was suing him for inducing insomnia. I couldn't put the thing down! The story of Thomas Paine--then and now, for the man and his ideas are very much alive today--stirs the heart, moves the mind and routs the demon of despair. The best political book of the year!” ―Bill Moyers

“Thomas Paine has at last found a worthy defender in Harvey Kaye, a gifted historian whose account of Paine is nearly as lively and feisty as its subject. Readers of all political persuasions will find this book of compelling interest, and will find it much harder henceforth to deny Paine's importance--not only in his own time, but in the entire sweep of American history.” ―Wilfred M. McClay, SunTrust Chair of Humanities at the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga, and author of The Masterless: Self and Society in Modern America

“If the rights of man are to be upheld in a dark time, we shall require an age of reason. Harvey Kaye's lucid work helps create the free citizen's memorial to Thomas Paine, who is still shamefully unacknowledged by the democratic republic that he lived and died to bring about.” ―Christopher Hitchens

“For two centuries, Americans have fought for possession of Tom Paine's soul at least as vigorously as our ancestors fought over his literal bones. Harvey Kaye tells the tale well, and a revelatory tale it is. Along the way, he demonstrates how much, in this time that tries men's and women's souls, the resurrection of Paine could still do for America's flagging radical imagination.” ―Todd Gitlin, author of The Intellectuals and the Flag

“In this stunning portrait of Tom Paine and his legacy across the political spectrum, Harvey J. Kaye recovers 'common sense' for our own time. This is a major contribution to understanding the American promise of freedom, equality, and the revolutionary tradition.” ―Eileen Boris, Hull Professor of Women's Studies, University of California, Santa Barbara

“In this fascinating study, Harvey Kaye rediscovers Thomas Paine's central place in an American radical tradition stretching from the Revolution to the present, and reminds us how Paine's words still resonate in American society today.” ―Eric Foner, Columbia University

“Harvey Kaye provides a radical eighteenth-century founder for Americans in the Twenty-First Century. Moreover, Kaye convincingly shows that for two hundred years Americans have not only constantly read and quoted Tom Paine, but also, in their repeated invocations of him, kept the radicalism of their great political experiment forever alive.” ―Isaac Kramnick, Professor of Government at Cornell University

“Harvey J. Kaye has given us the Tom Paine that Americans urgently need, a fearless, rabble-rousing radical who hugely advanced the cause of freedom. Scrupulously researched, wonderfully written, Thomas Paine and the Promise of America is a book that has found its time.” ―Paul Buhle, Brown University and co-editor, The Encyclopedia of the American Left

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88 of 94 people found the following review helpful.
The Most Controversial Founding Father
By Rob Hardy
The astonishing revolution that brought forth the American republic seems an unending source of curiosity; in the past year there has been one book after another about the American Revolution itself or about the Founding Fathers who eventually brought a Constitution to cap the Revolution's success. Perhaps we will never tire of examining the start of our nation. Perhaps, as Tom Paine himself wrote, even now "It is yet too soon to write the history of the Revolution." Paine himself has been written out of the Revolution many times by those who could not stand his political or religious principles, but as Harvey J. Kaye shows in _Thomas Paine and the Promise of America_ (Hill and Wang), Paine's authentically radical voice was not only an essential spark to unite the colonists against Britain, but also provided a legacy of inspiration to reformers in the succeeding two centuries.

Kaye's book encompasses two parts, one a brisk biography of Paine, and then a biography of Paine's posthumous life within American history and ideas. It was only in 1774 that Paine, upon the recommendation of Benjamin Franklin, crossed the Atlantic to Philadelphia. He was 38 years old, and quickly became a journal editor. He wrote _Common Sense_ anonymously, exhorting his countrymen not only to independence, but to republicanism. He formulated his arguments so that everyone could understand them, and everyone did; _Common Sense_ united and inspired the colonists to a new American cause. He became involved in politics again in France with the storming of the Bastille. He wrote _The Rights of Man_ which exhorted both Frenchmen and Americans to ensure revolutions so complete that slavery would be ended, women would be equals, peace would be enforced by a global union of republics, and church and state would be completely separated. _The Age of Reason_ was his assault on scripture and organized religion as mythologies imposed on humanity by clerics "to terrify and enslave mankind, and monopolize power and profit." He scorned the Bible for its cruelty and its lack of morality, leading antagonists for centuries to berate Paine as an atheist. He was, however, like many of the most famous of the founders, a deist, but he was one who put into book form his distrust of the general religion of his society.

The religious controversy has continued and has been kept alive both by the freethinkers who have claimed Paine as their own and by Christians who not content with hating the facts of Paine's life made up scurrilous lying biographies about him and false legends such as the one about his deathbed recantation of his disbelief. Teddy Roosevelt called him a "filthy little atheist", but he was none of those three. His lack of conventional religious belief has colored how his countrymen have perceived him ever since. Mark Twain and Herman Melville admired him; Lincoln avidly read _The Age of Reason_ and may well have written a deist treatise of his own, but his friends ensured no one else ever saw it. Franklin Roosevelt was the first president since Jefferson to quote Paine by name, in a wartime radio address that included Paine's famous "These are the times that try men's souls" passage. Even President Reagan in his turn was able to quote Paine, but the radicals on the left are the ones who always admired Paine's convictions. A key story here is about the communist Howard Fast, who in 1943 published the historical novel _Citizen Tom Paine_. Paine was thus drawn into the witch hunts, and when Fast was summoned before Congress and refused to name names, he was put into jail in 1950. His book was removed from the public school libraries of New York City, and J. Edgar Hoover sent agents to major libraries instructing them to remove and destroy Fast's works. It was the sort of oppression Paine would have recognized and abhorred. Kaye's book successfully charts the development of Paine's ideas during his life, and the utility and appropriations of his ideas even into our own times.

33 of 35 people found the following review helpful.
More than a Biography
By Jim
Although I purchased this book assuming it was a biography of Paine, I discovered it was much more. While the first third of the book is a short, excellent biography, the heart if the book is a study of Paine's influence on American's liberal, progressive, radical movements and even of the Reagan conservative revival. Kaye makes it clear that his sympathies lie with the left and views Reagan's reliance on Paine's words as a highjacking, but despite this bias, the book is an objective analyses of Paine's influence throughout the 230 years of American history. One question, I have often asked is why did the conservative elite of the Colonial Era, who had so much to lose if the Revolution failed, pledge the "their lives, their fortunes and scared honor" to the cause of American Independence? Kaye offers a plausible and logical explanation: the influence of Thomas Paine's pamphlets, most notably "Common Sense.".

3 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Great read about the true father of the American Revolution
By JoshInMillValley
I heard Harvey Kaye on Bill Moyers Journal and decided to read the book on my summer vacation. A true eye opener about the true father of the American revolution and how the polictics of personal destruction pre-date the 24x7 cable news cycle.

A great read about a great and doubt difficulat man.

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Jumat, 27 Februari 2015

^^ PDF Ebook Antioch and Rome: New Testament Cradles of Catholic Christianity, by S.S. Raymond E. Brown, John P. Meier

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Antioch and Rome: New Testament Cradles of Catholic Christianity, by S.S. Raymond E. Brown, John P. Meier

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Antioch and Rome: New Testament Cradles of Catholic Christianity, by S.S. Raymond E. Brown, John P. Meier

Two major New Testament scholars use the tools of modern biblical interpretation to reconstruct the history of two of the most important Christian centers of the first-century church.

  • Sales Rank: #454133 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: Paulist Pr
  • Published on: 1983-05-01
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.00" h x 5.50" w x .50" l, .0 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 242 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

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37 of 37 people found the following review helpful.
Why on earth is this book not back in print?
By otro lector mas
This is one of the most enjoyable histories of the earliest Church which you will come across: informative, lucid, concise, authoritative, and impartial. One would expect no less from a collaboration between two such towering Biblical scholars.

The authors trace the development of Christianity in each of the title cities thru three generations. In the first generation the only common sources to both cities are Paul and Acts. For the second generation all possible information is gleaned from Matthew's Gospel about Antiochene Christianity and from I Peter and Hebrews about Roman Christianity. Finally, I Clement is scrutinized regarding Roman Christianty and likewise Ignatius and the Didache regarding Antioch in the third generation.

I found particularly revealing their assessment of the close connection between Jerusalem and Roman Jews. As a result, Roman Judaism was much more conservative than that found elsewhere in the Diaspora, and if Paul wanted to be accepted in Rome he had to tone down his earlier rhetoric. Thus his letter to the Romans. This is a formidable rebuttal to those who claim that the destruction of Jerusalem and the preeminence of Rome resulted in Christianity drifting towards paganism and away from Judaism.

I am shocked that I'm the first to write an Amazon review for this gem which has been out almost a quarter of a century. I find it even more shocking that this book is now out of print. This is a work that should be edifying students of Christianity for generations.

24 of 24 people found the following review helpful.
An Important Point of View
By David E. Blair
I can not but agree with and amplify the comments of the previous reviewer regarding this book. It is now twenty odd years since this book was first published, and it was unavailable for a number of years. However, Paulist Press has now reprinted this work and it is finally available once again here on Amazon. While its content has not been revised or updated, this work still represents a major interpretation of early Church development that is as fresh today as when it was first proposed. Dealing with the Christian communities in Antioch and Rome in the first three generation after Jesus, Brown proposes in the book's introduction four different positions in the early Church on the matter of the observance of Jewish law and its application to gentile believers. The most conservative position advocated strict law observance including circumcision. One must become an adherent of Judaism to enter the Church. A conservative position advocated by James, the relative of Jesus, that required gentile converts to observe some Jewish law and practice but not circumcision. It is probably fair to say that this was the position of the Jerusalem apostles. A moderate position advocated by Paul especially in his later epistle to the Romans, and finally, a more radical law free mission advocated by the Hellenists as seen in Stephan's speech and the epistle to the Hebrews. Reading this, one can not but immediately notice that the interpretation of the relationship between Paul and the early Church at Jerusalem as uniformly hostile is absent. Meier and Brown propose a nuanced and evolutionary relationship between Paul and his adherents and the Jerusalem center.

Furthermore, these four identifications are not fixed positions but points on a continuum with fluidity in the middle and greater rigidity at the extremes. And, in the center of all this was the apostle Peter. Not present here is the all too common contemporary fixation with a Jamesian party including Peter locked in a death struggle for the soul of the early Church with a radical Pauline faction. Ultimately, for Meier and Brown, it is not a triumphant Paulinism that defines the early Church. For these scholars, the early Church is defined by a subtle and complex interaction between the two central positions in this dialogue. The early Church in the diaspora is seen as largely populated by Jewish Christian converts. Therefore, the paramount issue in the self identification of the early Church is how Jewish will it be. While conforming nicely to the available evidence, this is a minority opinion in the overheated scholarly discussion of Christian origins in the late twentieth and early twenty first centuries. The authors' evidence is adduced from the New Testament and the early Church fathers. Meir and Brown well cover the interaction of the Churches at Antioch and Rome with the Jerusalem center during the first Christian generation. A preliminary point of importance stressed by the authors is that there were significant Jewish Christian communities outside of Roman Palestine prior to Paul's mission work. Meier's work covering Antiochene Church development occupies the first ninety odd pages of the book with the remaining two thirds devoted to Brown's presentation of the early Roman Church.

Hellenistic Jewish Christians left Jerusalem after Stephan's stoning and represent the first known wave of concerted Christian mission work in the wider Roman Empire. The authors agree that Paul's gospel was approved of by the Jerusalem apostles. Paul did not teach a different gospel. His emphasis was different. And, as Meier points out, Paul lost at Antioch in the uproar over table fellowship. Paul was abandoned by those he was working with, and he set off on his own mission to evangelize Asia Minor. Meier is dubious regarding Paul's declaration of being the "apostle to the gentiles" while Peter is the "apostle to the circumcision." This is seen as the self aggrandizing rhetorical excess of a very upset and angry Paul. Also, he makes a case for disassociating the "Apostolic Decree" regarding Noahide observances by gentile converts from the meeting at Jerusalem in which Paul's gospel was sanctioned. Meier astutely points out that there would have been no cause for the Antioch dispute if the Noahide restrictions were already promulgated and in force. Brown opts for a relatively conservative Jewish Christian Church at Rome with strong foundational ties to Jerusalem. The forty-nine CE expulsion of the Jews from Rome is presented as a likely result of strife between Jews and Jewish Christians in the Roman synagogues. Paul's ministry and doctrine are seen as far more flexible over time than is often portrayed. And, ultimately, Paul is seen as assuming a much more conservative stance in his epistle to the Romans in an attempt to be acceptable to that Church and the Jerusalem center.

And, there is much, much more of interest here than I have been able to cover. While this book is accessible to most readers with a good background knowledge of Christian origins, it should be noted that this is a dense academic work which is heavily footnoted. To get the most out of this book, these notes need to be consulted and digested while reading the text because they contain much additional information germane to the discussion. This tends to break up the flow of the narrative and causes the reader to jump back and forth across the notes and text to glean the most from this study. Are there any weaknesses? Yes, Brown's extensive treatment of the letter to the Hebrews can be questioned. However, that is notoriously difficult territory. And, as Brown and Meier have noted, they are open to accusations of bias in favor of Roman Catholic orthodoxy. This then makes the choice of the words "Catholic Christianity" in the book's title unfortunate. However, a fair minded reader will define this as universal Christianity. Many would deny that any such emerging Church universal existed or that it was in the process of asserting itself. But, to do so effectively, one must take issue with the authors of this book and its conclusions, and their positions are well argued and meticulously documented. Support for their interpretations here can be found in the work of F. F. Bruce and James D. G. Dunn who can hardly be accused of being Roman Catholic apologists. All in all, this is a challenging book that deserves careful attention. Its conclusions demand to be fully engaged in any consideration of the development of the early Church.

4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
Not All Intellectuals Are Enemies, Or Pharisees
By Peter P. Fuchs
This is a very interesting book which I read years ago. And I love that the first author, Brown, was from my childhood Catholic parish, St. Rose of Lima in Miami Shores, and that the second, was a great grad school influence. But what I like best of all long term is the distinction they make, citing Hummel, (Note 130). Namely, that in rejecting Pharisees and Pharisaical understandings, Jesus was not rejecting "scribes" per se. That is, Jesus did not hate intellectuals, or intellectualism per se. In right wing religiosity there is such a strong anti-intellectual streak that it is important to point this out. It is in the Pharisaical approach, which of course can exist right in the midst of heady religiosity, that the problem lies. And it is in this sense, in which I think one should understand Meier's rather mysterious and aporpos-of-nothing-too precise comment in his lecture online called "Jesus, A Jew, But what Kind of Jew". In that lecture he comments, in almost Wagnerian fashion, that one should be careful but not worry too much about choosing one's friends, but be very, very careful about who one chooses as an enemy. A brilliant observation, borne of real-world experience for sure!

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Rabu, 25 Februari 2015

@ Ebook Free Apocalyptic Spirituality (Classics of Western Spirituality), by Bernard McGinn

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Apocalyptic Spirituality (Classics of Western Spirituality), by Bernard McGinn

The most in-depth and scholarly panorama of Western spirituality ever attempted!

In one series, the original writings of the universally acknowledged teachers of the Catholic, Protestant, Eastern Orthodox, Jewish, Islamic and Native American traditions have been critically selected, translated and introduced by internationally recognized scholars and spiritual leaders.

The texts are first-rate, and the introductions are informative and reliable. The books will be a welcome addition to the bookshelf of every literate religious persons". -- The Christian Century

  • Sales Rank: #1398582 in Books
  • Brand: Brand: Paulist Press
  • Published on: 1979-01-01
  • Original language: Latin
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.09" h x .91" w x 6.01" l, 1.10 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 334 pages
Features
  • Used Book in Good Condition

Language Notes
Text: English (translation)

About the Author
Bernard McGinn is the Naomi Shenstone Donnelley Professor Emeritus of Historical Theology and of the History of Christianity at the Divinity School at the University of Chicago. His many books include "Antichrist: Two Thousand Years of the Human Fascination with Evil" and "The Presence of God", a multivolume history of Western Christian mysticism.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful.
IS "THE END" NEAR? IT'S BEEN PREDICTED FOR SOME TIME...
By Steven H Propp
This very diverse 1979 volume contains [1] "The Blessed Life" by Lactantius (about 240-320) who was an advisor to the Roman emperor Constantine; [2] a letter on the "Origin and Time of the Antichrist" by Adso of Montier-en-Der (10th century, France); [3] several writings from Joachim of Fiore (12th century; who famously divided history into three epochs: the Age of the Father; Age of the Son; and Age of the Holy Spirit); [4] two Franciscans, Angelo of Clareno (1247-1337) and Peter John Olivi (1248-1298); and [5] the "visionary" Savonarola (1452-1498). Many of these texts were made available in English for the first time in this book.

Lactantius stated that "Those who say that the world always existed have one response from me: If the world always was, it can have no plan. (I omit the argument that nothing can exist without a beginning, a point them are unable to escape.)... God did not make the world for its own sake. Since it lacked sensation, it had no need for the sun's heat, the moon's light, the winds' breath, the moisture of showers, the nourishment of fruits." (Pg. 33)

Joachim suggested that "we will say what we can about these (future events) in their place. Expectation of future events may be made certain by the unfolding of the present." (Pg. 127) He explained, "the tempus of the first Testament began with Adam and continued even to Christ... The tempus of the New Testament began with Josiah, King of Judah, and will last until the consummation of the world, bearing fruit from Christ." (Pg. 127-128) He states solemnly, "At the end of the times and of the years 'Satan will be freed from his prison'... Then the commander of the army will be Gog, the final Antichrist... Among all the Antichrists who will appear in the world two are worse than the others..." (Pg. 140)

Savonarola observes that "My faithful listeners know how fittingly my expositions of the scriptures always agreed with the present times... In those first years I used to predict coming events only by means of scripture, rational arguments, and various parables... Then I began to hint that I had knowledge of future events... Finally, I began... making known the words divinely revealed to me frankly and exactly." (Pg. 197) Later, he added, "Whatever I have publicly preached about things to come has either already taken place or certainly will take place. Not one iota will fail. But note that when I spoke apart and privately... Perhaps I let slip something that was less true..." (Pg. 229)

This is a fascinating collection of writings; it sheds a great deal of light on the interpretation of biblical prophecies in the medieval period.

10 of 15 people found the following review helpful.
An unfamiliar perspective
By David Guthrie
The last twenty years have seen a resurgence of apocalyptic Christianity from the evangelical sector that has had a major effect on global politics and on the current economic crisis. This apocalyptic belief system was what enabled the Bush administration to garner sufficient popular support in the US to invade Iraq, with all the consequences that have flowed from that fateful adventure. So although this book may seem to be of fringe interest, dealing as it does with apocalyptic thinking from the 3rd century to the medieval era, the real impact of the book is in providing a perspective on modern evangelical apocalyptic.

The volume comprises principally of excerpts from the chosen writers themselves, with excellent introductions that enables the writings to be read in context. What emerges is a picture of a tradition that has been vibrant ever since the first century and, as noted above, is strong today. As with contemporary preachers of the apocalyptic, all the writers are absolutely certain of their predictions of what is to come. With historical hindsight, they were all just as absolutely wrong in their predictions. They were regarded highly in their day and excercised considerable influence.

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
Books That Say Repent While You Can
By thirdtwin
For people that want to go beyond the Book of Revelations to look at other apocalyptic literature (and there is a lot of it from all time periods and places) This is a decent introduction to the western view of the end of all things- so people can decide if they want to research further.

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Senin, 23 Februari 2015

> Free Ebook Sarah Johnson's Mount Vernon: The Forgotten History of an American Shrine, by Scott E. Casper

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Sarah Johnson's Mount Vernon: The Forgotten History of an American Shrine, by Scott E. Casper

Sarah Johnson's Mount Vernon brilliantly restores the lives and contributions of African Americans to the legacy of Mount Vernon. Digging beneath the well-known stories of George Washington and the era of America's birth, Scott E. Casper recovers the remarkable history of Sarah Johnson, who spent more than fifty years at Mount Vernon, in slavery and after emancipation. Through her life and those of her family and friends, Casper provides not only an intimate picture of Mount Vernon during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries―years that are rarely part of its public story―but also a window into a community of people who played an essential part in creating and maintaining this American landmark.

  • Sales Rank: #1419227 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-01-08
  • Released on: 2009-01-20
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 8.27" h x .71" w x 5.83" l, .65 pounds
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 320 pages

From Publishers Weekly
Schoolchildren, learning that George Washington freed his slaves when his wife died, may believe that slavery then ended at Mount Vernon, but this emancipation was not wholesale. Martha's slaves were not freed, and Mount Vernon remained a slave plantation. Historian Casper relates the complex tale of Mount Vernon's triple identities, home, workplace, and enduring, malleable national symbol, via the lives of its black workers and residents, slave and free, and its owners while he restores African-Americans' essential roles as actors—both as historical persons doing the work of maintaining Mount Vernon and as theater, today playing the roles that maintain an illusion of 18th-century accuracy. Casper uncovers the full breadth of these African-Americans' lives. Sarah Johnson, for example, was not only a slave, a servant and an attendant to the public decades after Washington's death; she was also a wife, mother, seamstress, landowner and default curator of the Mount Vernon residence. Casper succinctly relates how Washington's 18th-century estate became a 19th-century national shrine [and] site of reverent pilgrimage and deftly integrates national political, social and technological transformations into his tale. Unanticipated links and unsolved mysteries engage, while Casper's cautious speculation and meticulous documentation make his book as trustworthy as it is fascinating. illus. (Feb.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

“A fascinating look at a national shrine from another angle.” ―Jules Wagman, St. Louis Post-Dispatch

“Casper lays bare the unique narrative of America's first sacred shrine, capturing the dizzying complexity of an early American community largely unrecognized and misunderstood.” ―Richard Horan, The Christian Science Monitor

“Now, at last, Casper tells the story of the invisible men and women who worked the 8,000-acre riverfront estate for generations. While innumerable books have been written in recent years about the Founding Fathers, it's refreshing to read one in which slaves play a central part . . . Casper deftly uses the limited sources available to depict Johnson's life with an authenticity that is moving.” ―W. Ralph Eubanks, The Washington Post Book World

“Casper must piece the prism together from many sources . . . The efforts pay off. His account is evenhanded and scrupulously detailed, yet always emotionally connected to the life of housekeeper Sarah Johnson.” ―Erin Aubry Kaplan, Los Angeles Times

About the Author

Scott E. Casper is a professor of history at the University of Nevada, Reno. He is the author of Constructing American Lives, which won the 1999 Book History Prize from the Society for the History of Authorship, Reading, and Publishing.

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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful.
It wasn't until I finished this book that I realized how good it was
By Loves the View
This is a history of Mount Vernon following the death of George Washington. Because it is a story of the everyday life on and operation of the estate, it is a story of 200 years of African American history. There is a parallel history here too, about the pioneer days of the historic preservation movement.

Early vistors to Mount Vernon believed what they wanted to believe. Knowing Washington's will had freed his slaves (upon the death of Martha, who released them early) one could ignore reality and presume that those who labored in the field and encountered visitors were free. For 60 years it bubbles into public consciousness only every now and then that they are not.

In the first part of the book, Sarah is in the background as we learn about Washington's heirs, Martha's dower slaves, crops, the buying, selling and renting of people, and the precursors of the tourist trade yet to come. Sarah becomes the central vehicle for the story in the later half of the book. Sarah is a perfect vehicle for this history because her life illustrates her times.

Augustine Washington assumed control of this estate at age 21. From his mother, he received Sarah's mother Hannah, and noted her additions to his assets when she bore children. In 1844 he hired Hannah out to a cousin for $24 for the year. She returned from this forced labor pregnant and delivered a mulatto child naming her Sarah with her grandfather's last name, Parker. Later, when Mount Vernon was sold to a preservation society, which in part preserved it from the raveges of the Civil War, Sarah was also sold. In freedom she returned to her home, Mount Vernon, and became an employee of the new society.

The saga of Sarah's family, a metaphor for the contemporaneous sagas of thousands of African Americans, is told against the growth of Mount Vernon as a national shrine and tourist destination. While Mount Vernon is buffered, it cannot help but be effected by the successionist fervor, the civil war, the war's unsettling aftermath, Jim Crow, and World Wars I and II. Scott Casper takes the reader through all this, up to the present nascent awareness of the role of African Americans in history. On p. 219 there is a eloquent piece on Sarah who we know she was and who she may have been.

This is a short book, but its ideas will stay with you a long time.

2 of 2 people found the following review helpful.
The story after the story...
By Cynthia K. Robertson
I'm the type of reader who wants to know the story after the story. So after reading Ron Chenow's Washington: A Life, I thought Sarah Johnson's Mt. Vernon: The Forgotten History of an American Shrine by Scott E. Casper to be a good choice.

Sarah Johnson was born a slave in 1844 belonging to Augustine Washington, one of George Washington's nephews. While long after Washington's death, she lived at Mt. Vernon over 50 years--longer than our nation's first president. Casper relates the history of Mt. Vernon after Washington's death. It was owned and managed for long periods of time by nephews Bushrod Washington and then Augustine Washington. When the house reached a level of shabbiness that Augustine had not the money to address, he sold the mansion and 200 acres to the newly formed Mt. Vernon Ladies Association (MVLA) in 1858. After the Civil War, the MVLA had trouble finding enough local employees, so they hired Sarah and many of her family and friends. She worked at Mt. Vernon until 1892, and even after that, she returned once a year to cook and care for the members of the MVLA at their annual meeting.

Casper tells parallel stories in Sarah Johnson's Mt. Vernon. There's the story of Mt. Vernon, the house. Washington didn't build Mt. Vernon, but he did make it what we see today. Nobody knew the house better than the former slaves who served the Washington nephews, and Sarah was often consulted about original features. There's the story of Mt. Vernon, the workplace. Although Sarah was freed after the Civil War, she often worked harder for the MVLA than she did as a slave. And then there is the story of Mt. Vernon, the shrine. The story of the MVLA is fascinating, and they should be given credit for purchasing and preserving Mt. Vernon. But these women weren't preservationists or historians and soon, the mansion "became a Victorian cabinet of curiosities...a hybrid historic house, suspended between alternative visions of nationhood and between conflicting notions of authenticity."

Casper also documents the story of African Americans and Mt. Vernon. As Jim Crow got a foothold in the late 1890s, the MVLA slowly phased out their black employees, although they did offer help to some of their long-time staff. This help consisted of the paying of medical bills, keeping sick and dying employees on salary, and sometimes contributing money toward their funeral expenses. Mt. Vernon also had to reinvent itself--especially in terms of "acknowledging its African American past and reversing its--and America's--history of omissions and distortions."

While today we consider Mt. Vernon to be the product of George Washington's labors, Casper shows us that the African Americans who lived and worked at Mt. Vernon are equally responsible for this historic home. "Their daily labors maintained Mt. Vernon no less than MLVA's fund raising and governance did. Their carefully honed performance shaped the Father of His Country whom visitors saw as well as the image of slavery days." After reading Sarah Johnson's Mt. Vernon, I can't wait to visit there for the first time.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
behind the scenes at a shrine
By Concord
As other reviewers have noted the basic story here, I will note that Casper has found out a lot of information about African Americans who lived and worked on the grounds of Mount Vernon through the 1800s. He is not interested in trashing George Washington, but in getting at the lives of "unsung" people and then using their lives to discuss larger themes in American life. It's a nice blend of local and national history, with the emphasis on the local.

Two small points, one good, one less good. On the bright side there is humor here--especially the pilfering tourists who want to take just a little piece of the place home with them. My only complaint was that somehow I missed the point that the chapters were chronological in order, not by theme or person, and I was baffled for the first few dozen pages until I figured that out. Maybe my bad, maybe it could be clearer.

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Sabtu, 21 Februari 2015

^^ Free Ebook Students for a Democratic Society: A Graphic History, by Harvey Pekar

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Students for a Democratic Society: A Graphic History, by Harvey Pekar

The History of SDS as You've Never Seen It Before

In 1962 at a United Auto Workers' camp in Michigan, Students for a Democratic Society held its historic convention and prepared the famous Port Huron Statement, drafted by Tom Hayden. This statement, criticizing the U.S. government's failure to pursue international peace or address domestic inequality, became the organization's manifesto. Its last convention was held in 1969 in Chicago, where, collapsing under the weight of its notoriety and popularity, it shattered into myriad factions. Through brilliant art and they were-there dialogue, famed graphic novelist Harvey Pekar, gifted artist Gary Dumm, and renowned historian Paul Buhle illustrate the tumultuous decade that first defined and then was defined by the men and women who gathered under the SDS banner. Students for a Democratic Society: A Graphic History captures the idealism and activism that drove a generation of young Americans to believe that even one person's actions can help transform the world.

  • Sales Rank: #942449 in Books
  • Published on: 2008-01-08
  • Released on: 2008-01-08
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Dimensions: 9.00" h x .63" w x 6.00" l, .92 pounds
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 224 pages

From Publishers Weekly
American Splendor's Pekar has been incredibly prolific in the last few years, and more recently he has taken on nonautobiographical projects to varying degrees of success. This newest effort works on a variety of levels. For one, Pekar is not the sole author. He constructs a narrative of the history of the Students for a Democratic Society, but frequently steps aside to allow actual participants in that history to tell their own stories, using his casual first-person model of storytelling. The narrative moves through the decade of SDS history and then moves into the participant accounts, offering both a macro and a micro vision of the times. The artwork is mostly by frequent Pekar collaborator Gary Dumm, whose crisp, neutral realism may not be thrilling but does move the story along and does a fine job of conveying the various settings. As a whole, the book acts like a sophisticated handbook on an often misunderstood organization. It's good comics and excellent history. (Jan.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

“Students for a Democratic Society: A Graphic History will make old timers remember, discuss, argue and laugh, while the young will bubble with questions. For me, it brought back untold memories and induced visions of the next great wave of social activism!” ―Michael James, JOIN/SDS organizer, founder of Rising Up Angry, and proprietor of Chicago's Heartland Cafe

“My own radical journey began with Mad Magazine, so it feels great that SDS should enter the culture of comic folklore thanks to Harvey Pekar and Paul Buhle. May this graphic history be an informing contribution as a new generation of SDS writes its own story.” ―Tom Hayden, founding member of the Students for a Democratic Society

“Hey! Did you know grandpa was a revolutionary? If you want the inside story from SDS veterans themselves, with a minimum of rhetoric and a maximum of sex, drugs, violence, and internal faction-fighting, check out this wonderful graphic history. Almost--but not quite--like being there. You'll laugh, you'll cry, and no cop will hit you over the head, either. Grandma and grandpa's bedtime stories are guaranteed to get the children dreaming of their own anti-imperialist movement.” ―Mark Rudd, a founder of the Weather Underground, the last National Secretary of SDS, and the Chairman of the Columbia University chapter of SDS during the 1968 student strike

“Students for a Democratic Society: A Graphic History brings the historical power of SDS to life for the new generation of SDS activists. At a time when the state repression and militarism of the 1960's and 70's finds its closest parallel in the Iraq War and the Patriot Act, this accessible book maps out the legacy of resistance our generation has inherited. This is mandatory reading for serious, young organizers who desire to combat oppression while avoiding the errors of their predecessors.” ―Senia Barragan, Brown University/Providence SDS

About the Author

Harvey Pekar is best known for his graphic autobiography, American Splendor, on which comic artist Gary Dumm collaborated. Paul Buhle, a senior lecturer at Brown University, was founding editor of the SDS journal Radical America.

Most helpful customer reviews

19 of 24 people found the following review helpful.
Entertaining history of a vital movement.
By Preston C. Enright
This graphic history of "Students for a Democratic Society" brings to life an important effort at participatory democracy and protest that had 80,000 to 100,000 activists at its peak in the late sixties. SDS disintegrated for a combination of reasons, some interpersonal, some external disruptions from the FBI The COINTELPRO Papers: Documents from the FBI's Secret Wars Against Dissent in the United States (South End Press Classics Series), and also the splintering off of more militant groups like The Weather Underground. Nevertheless, SDS was a learning experience for many and contributed to the growing women's movement, the gay rights movement, the environmental movement and so forth. Many SDS members created new approaches to social change, such as Tom Hayden becoming involved in politics and writing books such as Ending the War in Iraq, Michael Albert who helped to found Z Magazine and has written and lectured widely on alternative economics Realizing Hope: Life beyond Capitalism, and Thom Hartmann who has become a nationally syndicated radio host and author on such topics as Unequal Protection: The Rise of Corporate Dominance and the Theft of Human Rights. Even the more militant figures of SDS are today contributing to progressive social change, such as William Ayers, who is a professor in Illinois Fugitive Days: A Memoir.
Additionally, an all-new SDS movement is developing with over 110 chapters worldwide. While their activities are ignored by the corporate media, members have taken part in courageous actions such as a blockade of the Port of Tacoma where the U.S. military was loading Stryker vehicles for Iraq. Many SDS members attended the U.S. Social Forum in Atlanta. So, while it is true that A Hard Rain Fell: SDS and Why It Failed, a new SDS has grown out of the manure of the current administration of our plutocracy, and its many activities include plans to protest the Republican National Convention in St. Paul.
[...]

17 of 24 people found the following review helpful.
Bad History bad drawings
By Thoughtful1
I was disappointed with this book. As a history of SDS it is episodic and disjoint. There is no attempt to give the viewpoints continuity. Some of the voices were cynical some were just egocentric, none were very informative. Did HSP really disolve into drug abusing powerlessness? What did it matter anyway?
As a separate issue the drawings are boring. The protestors break thru security lines to the lawn of the Pentagon. Without the text, it looks like a dull dull dull picnic.With the text it looks like there wasn't much of a protest going on. That is typical of the illustrations. The text says that women and men were taking equal part in the housekeeping at one 'project house'. Graphic shows women cooking, men talking. Kent State is condensed into two pages at the end. Throughout the book words in the text are in bold face type; the words in boldface seem to be chosen randomly.

Graphic Format can be used to bring an added dimension to an historical account. This book is an example trying to exploit the current interest in graphic format with a second rate text and ill planned pictures.

4 of 5 people found the following review helpful.
Form Your Cadre
By G. S. Malitz
What ever happened to this style of activism? Where is it when it is needed most? The 60's mantra of 'One generation got old, one generation got soul' can't possibly be limited to just that generation can it? This should be must reading on H.S. reading lists when it comes to 60-70's history. Not only does it tell a story that will never find its way into regulated reading lists, it also does it in a way that would be engaging to students (not that that is ever a consideration of course). I participated in those times, so of course I loved the book. Let others learn from our mistakes and hopefully catch our unbridled enthusiasm while reading about those bygone days.

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