Description
Richard Drake presents a new interpretation of Charles Austin Beard's life and work. The foremost American historian and a leading public intellectual in the first half of the twentieth century, Beard participated actively in the debates about American politics and foreign policy surrounding the two world wars. In a radical change of critical focus, Charles Austin Beard places the European dimension of Beard's thought at the center, correcting previous biographers' oversights and presenting a far more nuanced appreciation for Beard's life.
Drake analyzes the stages of Beard's development as a historian and critic: his role as an intellectual leader in the Progressive movement, the support that he gave to the cause of American intervention in World War I, and his subsequent revisionist repudiation of Wilsonian ideals and embrace of non-interventionism in the lead-up to World War II. Charles Austin Beard shows that, as Americans tally the ruinous costs-both financial and moral-of nation-building and informal empire, the life and work of this prophet of history merit a thorough reexamination.
About the Author
Richard Drake is the Lucile Speer Research Chair in Politics and History at the University of Montana. He has published several books, including The Education of an Anti-Imperialist.
Reviews
An incisive view of the power of Beard, and a sense of his intellectual origins. Drake's worthy volume seeks to take full measure of Charles Beard's contribution to the scholarship of American history.
* The Progressive *An estimable study. Drake's fine book performs an important service. It invites readers to do what Beard himself strove to do as he kept close watch on events during the 1930s and 1940s: to remain alert to hypocrisy and contradiction contributing to the misuse of American power. In an era awash with fake news, the handiwork not only of policymakers but of the media itself, this task becomes more important than ever.
* The American Conservative *An unfolding account of [Charles Austin Beard's] ideas and arguments. The cold, hard face of Charles Austin Beard peers from the front cover of Mr. Drake's biography, as if from the other side of a tinted glass. His is a strong, hard visage, that of a man who long ago had made up his own mind about the world and America's limited place in it.
* Wall Street Journal *Drake's book is to be recommended for historians of the interwar period in the United States, the 1930s, and the intellectual history of the United States in the first half of the twentieth century, as well as anyone interested in the range of historiographical thought in American history. Drake breaks new ground in showing Beard's relationship to European social thought, as well as Beard's friendship with Herbert Hoover in the later 1930s it will likely remain a standard work for many years to come, one that anyone interested in Charles Beard should not pass over.
* H-Net *Drake has written a straightforward account of Beard's rise and fall. The book excels at showing how Beard's understanding of American history.
* The Journal of American History *Book Information
ISBN 9781501770173
Author Richard Drake
Format Paperback
Page Count 336
Imprint Cornell University Press
Publisher Cornell University Press
Weight(grams) 907g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 22mm