Lincoln Dreamt He Died: The Midnight Visions of Remarkable Americans from Colonial Times to Freud - Hardcover

9781137278272: Lincoln Dreamt He Died: The Midnight Visions of Remarkable Americans from Colonial Times to Freud
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Historian Andrew Burstein explores the early American psyche through the dreams of its citizens, including such luminaries as Henry David Thoreau, Ralph Waldo Emerson, Abraham Lincoln, and Mark Twain

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"An acclaimed historian dives headlong into the dreams of some iconic Americans." -"Kirkus reviews" "This quirky, episodic 200-year gambol explores the development of the American Dream by unpacking Americans' dreams.... Burstein's elegantly crafted nightstand tome demonstrates that dreams "reflect a distinctly... human desire to chart time via stories." --Publishers Weekly"An acclaimed historian dives headlong into the dreams of some iconic Americans." --Kirkus Reviews"Lincoln Dreamt He Died provides a compelling perspective on America's collective psyche. Readers will gain new insight into luminaries including Benjamin Rush, Henry David Thoreau, and Thomas Jefferson, but will likely gain just as much pleasure from the vividly-drawn and lesser known dreamers: a spurned lover in New Orleans, a Norwegian-born sailor in Manhattan, a Civil War soldier and the young woman he left behind in Ohio. Burstein has given us a first-rate cultural history, 'from the inside out.'" --Amy Greenberg, author of A Wicked War"Andrew Burstein is one of the most original and readable historians in our midst." --Douglas L. Wilson, Lincoln Studies Center at Knox College and two-time winner of the Lincoln Prize"'I don't know any thing more troublesome than . . . those people who are eternally pestering one with recitals of their dreams, ' complained Henry Laurens, onetime president of the Continental Congress. Two days later, he anonymously printed his own dream in a newspaper. With a keen eye for such fascination and ambivalence, Andrew Burstein has written a compelling history of unconscious America. For much of our past, Americans slept; dreams filled their hours and shaped their identities. Yet rarely have historians looked at the nation asleep, or at the lingering of dreams in daylight. Burstein, one of our most creative and perceptive scholars and writers, awakens us to the significance of dreams--powerful, peculiar, and elusive--in the lives of such figures as Washington and Lincoln, Thoreau and Twain, and in the broader culture of the young republic." --T.J. Stiles, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt"Quite apart from the mythic dream of upward mobility, America in past centuries has given rise to myriad visions. In this absorbing volume, not only does Burstein explore the nocturnal fantasies of famed politicians and philosophers, but we also learn of ordinary citizens with extra ordinary imaginations. Rarely has a work of history so skillfully probed the American psyche." --A. Roger Ekirch, author of At Day's Close: Night in Times Past"For anyone who thinks that dreams are trivial, Lincoln Dreamt He Died provides a bracing historical corrective. Burstein's guided tour of America's nocturnal imagination shows that many prominent Americans, from Benjamin Rush and Joseph Priestley to Louisa May Alcott and Mark Twain, took their dreams quite seriously and shared them with others as a source of amusement, inspiration, and enlightenment. This fascinating book reveals a deep current of dreaming curiosity that has shaped American culture from its earliest days all the way into the modern era." --Kelly Bulkeley, author of American Dreamers and Dreaming in the World's Religions This quirky, episodic 200-year gambol explores the development of the American Dream by unpacking Americans' dreams . Burstein's elegantly crafted nightstand tome demonstrates that dreams "reflect a distinctly... human desire to chart time via stories. "Publishers Weekly" An acclaimed historian dives headlong into the dreams of some iconic Americans. "Kirkus Reviews" "Lincoln Dreamt He" "Died" provides a compelling perspective on America's collective psyche. Readers will gain new insight into luminaries including Benjamin Rush, Henry David Thoreau, and Thomas Jefferson, but will likely gain just as much pleasure from the vividly-drawn and lesser known dreamers: a spurned lover in New Orleans, a Norwegian-born sailor in Manhattan, a Civil War soldier and the young woman he left behind in Ohio. Burstein has given us a first-rate cultural history, from the inside out.' "Amy Greenberg, author of A Wicked War" Andrew Burstein is one of the most original and readable historians in our midst. "Douglas L. Wilson, Lincoln Studies Center at Knox College and two-time winner of the Lincoln Prize" 'I don't know any thing more troublesome than . . . those people who are eternally pestering one with recitals of their dreams, ' complained Henry Laurens, onetime president of the Continental Congress. Two days later, he anonymously printed his own dream in a newspaper. With a keen eye for such fascination and ambivalence, Andrew Burstein has written a compelling history of unconscious America. For much of our past, Americans slept; dreams filled their hours and shaped their identities. Yet rarely have historians looked at the nation asleep, or at the lingering of dreams in daylight. Burstein, one of our most creative and perceptive scholars and writers, awakens us to the significance of dreams--powerful, peculiar, and elusive--in the lives of such figures as Washington and Lincoln, Thoreau and Twain, and in the broader culture of the young republic. "T.J. Stiles, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt" Quite apart from the mythic dream of upward mobility, America in past centuries has given rise to myriad visions. In this absorbing volume, not only does Burstein explore the nocturnal fantasies of famed politicians and philosophers, but we also learn of ordinary citizens with extra ordinary imaginations. Rarely has a work of history so skillfully probed the American psyche. "A. Roger Ekirch, author of At Day's Close: Night in Times Past" For anyone who thinks that dreams are trivial, "Lincoln Dreamt He Died" provides a bracing historical corrective. Burstein's guided tour of America's nocturnal imagination shows that many prominent Americans, from Benjamin Rush and Joseph Priestley to Louisa May Alcott and Mark Twain, took their dreams quite seriously and shared them with others as a source of amusement, inspiration, and enlightenment. This fascinating book reveals a deep current of dreaming curiosity that has shaped American culture from its earliest days all the way into the modern era. "Kelly Bulkeley, author of American Dreamers and Dreaming in the World's Religions"" "This quirky, episodic 200-year gambol explores the development of the American Dream by unpacking Americans' dreams.... Burstein's elegantly crafted nightstand tome demonstrates that dreams "reflect a distinctly... human desire to chart time via stories."--Publishers Weekly "An acclaimed historian dives headlong into the dreams of some iconic Americans." -"Kirkus reviews" ""Lincoln Dreamt He""Died" provides a compelling perspective on America's collective psyche. Readers will gain new insight into luminaries including Benjamin Rush, Henry David Thoreau, and Thomas Jefferson, but will likely gain just as much pleasure from the vividly-drawn and lesser known dreamers: a spurned lover in New Orleans, a Norwegian-born sailor in Manhattan, a Civil War soldier and the young woman he left behind in Ohio. Burstein has given us a first-rate cultural history, 'from the inside out.'"--Amy Greenberg, author of "A Wicked War""Andrew Burstein is one of the most original and readable historians in our midst."--Douglas L. Wilson, Lincoln Studies Center at Knox College and two-time winner of the Lincoln Prize "I don't Know any thing more troublesome than . . . those people who are eternally pestering one with recitals of their dreams," complained Henry Laurens, onetime president of the Continental Congress. Two days later, he anonymously printed his own dream in a newspaper. With a keen eye for such fascination and ambivalence, Andrew Burstein has written a compelling history of unconscious America. For much of our past, Americans slept; dreams filled their hours and shaped their identities. Yet rarely have historians looked at the nation asleep, or at the lingering of dreams in daylight. Burstein, one of our most creative and perceptive scholars and writers, awakens us to the significance of dreams--powerful, peculiar, and elusive--in the lives of such figures as Washington and Lincoln, Thoreau and Twain, and in the broader culture of the young republic."--T. ""Lincoln Dreamt He""Died" provides a compelling perspective on America's collective psyche. Readers will gain new insight into luminaries including Benjamin Rush, Henry David Thoreau, and Thomas Jefferson, but will likely gain just as much pleasure from the vividly-drawn and lesser known dreamers: a spurned lover in New Orleans, a Norwegian-born sailor in Manhattan, a Civil War soldier and the young woman he left behind in Ohio. Burstein has given us a first-rate cultural history, 'from the inside out.'"--Amy Greenberg, author of "A Wicked War""Andrew Burstein is one of the most original and readable historians in our midst."--Douglas L. Wilson, Lincoln Studies Center at Knox College and two-time winner of the Lincoln Prize "I don't Know any thing more troublesome than . . . those people who are eternally pestering one with recitals of their dreams," complained Henry Laurens, onetime president of the Continental Congress. Two days later, he anonymously printed his own dream in a newspaper. With a keen eye for such fascination and ambivalence, Andrew Burstein has written a compelling history of unconscious America. For much of our past, Americans slept; dreams filled their hours and shaped their identities. Yet rarely have historians looked at the nation asleep, or at the lingering of dreams in daylight. Burstein, one of our most creative and perceptive scholars and writers, awakens us to the significance of dreams--powerful, peculiar, and elusive--in the lives of such figures as Washington and Lincoln, Thoreau and Twain, and in the broader culture of the young republic."--T.J. Stiles, author of the Pulitzer Prize-winning "The First Tycoon: The Epic Life of Cornelius Vanderbilt" "For anyone who thinks that dreams are trivial, "Lincoln Dreamt He Died" provides a bracing historical corrective. Burstein's guided tour of America's nocturnal imagination shows that many prominent Americans, from Benjamin Rush and Joseph Priestley to Louisa May Alcott and Ma
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Before Sigmund Freud made dreams the cornerstone of understanding an individual’s inner life, Americans shared their dreams unabashedly with one another through letters, diaries, and casual conversation. In this innovative new book, highly regarded historian Andrew Burstein goes back for the first time to discover what we can learn about the lives and emotions of Americans, from colonial times to the beginning of the modern age. Through a thorough study of dreams recorded by iconic figures such as John and Abigail Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and Abraham Lincoln, as well as everyday men and women, we glimpse the emotions of earlier generations and understand how those feelings shaped their lives and careers, and thus gain a fuller multi-dimensional sense of our own past. No one has ever looked at the building blocks of the American identity in this way, and Burstein reveals important clues andlandmarks that show theorigins of the ideas and values that remain central to who we are today.

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  • VerlagPalgrave Macmillan
  • Erscheinungsdatum2013
  • ISBN 10 1137278277
  • ISBN 13 9781137278272
  • EinbandTapa dura
  • Anzahl der Seiten336
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