Casting Her Own Shadow: Eleanor Roosevelt and the Shaping of Postwar Liberalism
📄 Viewing lite version
Full site ›
Book Details
Author(s)Allida M. Black
PublisherColumbia University Press
ISBN / ASIN0231104049
ISBN-139780231104043
AvailabilityOnly 1 left in stock - order soon.
CategoryHardcover
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸
Description ▲
In Casting Her Own Shadow, historian Allida Black chronicles Eleanor Roosevelt's considerable---if often unacknowledged---influence on liberal politics. Throughout her adult life, Roosevelt campaigned for civil rights and women's issues, conducting a vigorous campaign of editorials in publications like Redbook and The New York Times to advance the causes she espoused. She enjoyed a huge following, Black notes, not least because her writing was commonsensical and good-humored, even when Roosevelt was clearly irritated. "I am beginning to think," she once observed, for instance, "that if you have been a liberal, and if you believe that those who are strong must sometimes consider the weak, and that with strength and power goes responsibility, automatically some people will consider you a Communist." Better known than her husband, Franklin Delano Roosevelt, when he entered national politics, Eleanor managed to keep her own identity even as his advisors urged her to keep a lower profile and stay out of the news. What bearing does all this have on the present? Well, this is a matter being played out even now in Washington, for no one quite resembles Roosevelt so much as Hillary Clinton, whose work as a politician and newspaper columnist echoes Roosevelt's---and who has been similarly reviled for expressing independent ideas.
More Books in Hardcover
The Call of the Wild (Puffin Classics)
View
Tacit and Explicit Knowledge
View
Performance, Ethics and Spectatorship in a Global Age …
View
Bad News - Volumes 1 and 2 (Routledge Revivals) (Routl…
View
Drug Transport in Antimicrobial and Anticancer Chemoth…
View
Out of Bounds: Anglo-Indian Literature and the Geograp…
View
The Voices of Romance: Studies in Dialogue and Charact…
View
Converging Streams: Art of the Hispanic and Native Ame…
View
What Handwriting Tells You About Yourself, Your Friend…
View