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The Story of American Freedom

The Story of American Freedom

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A absolute must read for every American
Review: As Americans we have a tendancy to think of this country as the birthplace of freedom and enlightenment, that is just came to us naturally from the very beginning. Well, think again. We have not only thwarted freedom for women, minorities, immigrants and others, but our struggle for freedom has been long and is not over yet.
This book also explains the differences in our meaning of the word freedom and how it has been used and manipulated by ever special interest group.
This is a fascinating study and a compelling read. It should have been written, now it needs to be read. FIVE STARS!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Left-Wing Revisionist Tripe
Review: Conservatives and Libertarians beware! Not very objective... reads like a liberal social history where American freedom and liberty can't quite reach into the economic realm. Foner is an okay writer, but typical of the many liberal cultural imperialists who try to pass off their historical perspective as objective history... In contrast, the overtly conservative historian Paul Johnson makes his views known to his readers and doesn't obfuscate fact with ideological dogma.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Highly Recommended
Review: Eric Foner's title - The Story of American Freedom - is well chosen. The word freedom is so central to our national creed and discourse that it is seldom examined closely. Freedom for who? Freedom for what? Freedom from what?

Foner shows that far from being a fixed concept, the story of freedom is an ever-changing one. In our nation's founding, freedom was only truly enjoyed by property-holding white males. The story ever since then has been the expansion of the meaning in two broad historical senses. One is the struggle of broad classes of people to gain freedom. The freeing of slaves is the most famous narrative in this sense, but it is only one of many. For example, before that was the broadening of the right for democratic participation to wage earners as well as property-holders

The other is the expansion of what freedom itself means. Foner is especially good at exploring this with respect to womens' movements to not only gain the right to vote, but also to exercise more control over their own bodies.

One star is deducted in this review for the last chapter, which shows the peril of historians writing "today's history." As other reviews have alluded, this is the most politicized part of the book. Foner's strong left bias shows a lttle too baldly. I say this as one who basically agrees with his politics.

Still, essential reading for anyone interested in who we are as a people.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: American history as it should be told.
Review: I enjoy Foner's books, I think he a brilliant historian, however I think perhaps he has here strayed a bit too far from the period of expertise (the Civil War era). However, on the other hand, why shouldn't he move out of his comfort zone! But this means that the book is strongest when dealing with the pre- and post- Civil War period. I feel that Foner is less assured when writing about the twentieth century. His pro-60's style radicalism and anti-Reaganite biases show up too much to be entirely convincing. For all that, his writing is always forceful and interesting.I would have liked the book to be less 'one thing after another' e.g. there was the Abolitionists, followed by the Gilded Age, followed by Progressivism, followed by the Roaring Twenties, followed by the New Deal ...etc. etc. I cannot help but wonder if Progressivism was a liberal response to the depression of the 1870s and 1880s, and the New Deal to the Depression of the 1930s, what will happen when the 'Reagan Revolution' is tested by the winds of severe recession? Already, the 'Reagan Revolution' is looking threadbare in the light of G.W.Bush's 'Compassionate Conservatism', and if the Democrats regain the White House in 2000, who knows what will come next? It would be interested for Foner to update this volume in eight, or even four years time.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A complex analysis of the central idea of American history
Review: I first became acquainted with Eric Foner through his masterful "Reconstruction," a book of history that illuminated modern problems and prospects through a detailed look at their historical roots perhaps better than any other I have read. Taken in and of itself I have not found another book on the Reconstruction period that is as good, or as deep, or as well written. "Freedom" seems to be a different kind of work, an intellectual history that tested my abilities in a way that "factual" history does not. Even as he describes the shifts, subtle and overt, that have either dragged, or been dragged, by concepts of freedom, he never seems to lose the sense of the impelling force of that concept. This is a great book for students of history, and of America, since it is a superb inquiry into our commitment to an ideal so powerful that it has been a driving force throughout the world in this latter half of the century. It is also a great book for those interested in political life generally. It entertains and challenges, and teaches even amateurs like me.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A well-done, comparative study of freedom
Review: The idea of freedom in American history seems to have gone through a series of cycles and metamorphic changes to suit a variety of social, political, and economic changes. These changes constitute a history in and of itself which goes far to define what freedom means to America's diverse population. Eric Foner's book "The Story of American Freedom" seeks to narrate that interesting history. Foner basically breaks down the meaning of freedom into two distinct spheres. Freedom of the individual to do as he/she pleases without government interference and, second, freedom that is supported by government intervention. Foner makes interesting points when he reveals that our nation's idea of freedom started out as socially narrow and then expanded to include other races and women as well. Economically, as demonstrated during the Gilded Age, freedom was to be enjoyed by those who fit the Darwinian ideal and denied to those who fell short of it. During the Progressive era, Foner illustrates that freedom was defined as government regulations on labor, food safety, and child labor laws meant to ensure the right to a better lifestyle. Throughout the book, Foner brilliantly narrates how the idea of freedom was tailored for political purposes for both the Left and the Right. I really enjoyed this book. Both a critique and a narrative of the idea of freedom, Foner's book provides a comprehensive overview of this all-pervasive concept. While I found it to be a little biased in its treatement of the 1960's (which prevents a 5-star rating) I nevertheless found it to be a well organized and well documented book (the pages of footnotes being very detailed). A must for an understanding of such an over-generalized concept.


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