Description
Barnum deliberately cultivated his ambiguous public image through a lifelong advertising campaign, shrewdly exploiting the cultural and technological capabilities of the new publishing industry. While running his numerous shows and exhibitions, Barnum managed to publish newspaper articles, exposes of fraud (not his own), self-help tracts, and a series of best-selling autobiographies, each promising to give "the true history of my many adventures."
Updated editions of The Life of P. T. Barnum appeared regularly, allowing Barnum to keep up with demand and prune the narrative of details that might offend posterity. The present volume is the first modern edition of Barnum's original and outrageous autobiography, published in 1855 and unavailable for more than a century. Brazen, confessional, and immensely entertaining, it immortalizes the showman who hoodwinked customers into paying to hear the reminiscences of a woman presented as George Washington's 161-year-old nurse, the impresario who brought Jenny Lind to America and toured Europe with General Tom Thumb, and the grand entrepreneur of the American Museum of New York. Above all, it ensures that Barnum would be properly remembered . . . exactly as he created himself.
For over fifty years Barnum dominated American entertainment--in this first reprinting in paperback of his "original" biography, it will be easy to understand how he was able to create the "Greatest Show on Earth," a show as outrageous and entertaining as Barnum himself.
About the Author
P. T. Barnum (1810-1891) was one of the larger-than-life personalities who strode through nineteenth-century America, founder of the touring American circus and a true example of the self-made (and self-promoted) celebrity.
Book Information
ISBN 9780252069024
Author P T. Barnum
Format Paperback
Page Count 448
Imprint University of Illinois Press
Publisher University of Illinois Press
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 33mm