Description
About the Author
Carla Mulford is Associate Professor of English at Pennsylvania State and the editor of The Cambridge Companion to Benjamin Franklin. She is also the founding president of the Society for Early Americanists.
Reviews
Carla Mulford takes up the interpretive challenge in a "literary biography". Although many readers will see her work as intellectual history, she depicts the project as "something of a hybrid form, blending the qualities of historical documentary biography with aesthetic concerns about the life of the mind" * T.H. Breen, The Times Literary Supplement *
Certainly this book manuscript deserves publication by Oxford University Press. For one thing, Carla Mulford has earned the standing of a major scholar in the field of Early American Literature and specifically in studies on Franklin. My own observations cannot note all of the shrewd observations on her topic which she includes. Her main subject is a crucial area in the study of Franklin's thought, and she deals with that material in an authoritative way throughout ... I also like the valuable ambiguity of the title because her subject is not only the goals and purposes of empire but also the close of Franklin's engagement with the possibilities of a viable transatlantic British empire. * Ormond Seavey, George Washington University; editor of Autobiography and Other Writings by Benjamin Franklin *
First, there is a real contribution here, as I have described above, both to Franklin studies and to early American cultural history. Second, the major strength of Mulford's work is the breadth of its coverage. She has read everything in the primary sources and integrates them well ... I think this is a scholarly work that will land on the shelves of libraries and a few Franklin scholars ... I'd offer a contract. I admire the work and even more the learning that it bespeaks. * Peter Charles Hoffer, University of Georgia; author of When Benjamin Franklin Met the Reverend Whitefield: Enlightenment, Revival, and the Power of the Printed Word *
In Benjamin Franklin and the Ends of Empire, Carla J. Mulford offers an intellectual and literary biography that explains how the man many historians have considered to be a committed imperialist ultimately joined the revolution to end the British Empire in part of North America. * Nathan R. Kozuskanich, American Historical Review *
Mulford's Benjamin Franklin and the Ends of Empire is the fruit of a lifetime's study of the statesman and polymath, a polemically engaged and bold attempt to lend coherence to a famously multifaceted career. * The New York Review of Books *
Book Information
ISBN 9780199384198
Author Carla J. Mulford
Format Hardback
Page Count 446
Imprint Oxford University Press Inc
Publisher Oxford University Press Inc
Weight(grams) 680g
Dimensions(mm) 163mm * 241mm * 33mm