A Real American Character

A Real American Character
Author: Carl Rollyson
Publsiher: Univ. Press of Mississippi
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2015-09-10
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9781628460483

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Walter Brennan (1894-1974) was one of the greatest character actors in Hollywood history. He won three Academy Awards and became a national icon starring as Grandpa in The Real McCoys. He appeared in over two hundred motion pictures and became the subject of a Norman Rockwell painting, which celebrated the actor's unique role as the voice of the American Western. His life journey from Swampscott, Massachusetts, to Hollywood, to a twelve thousand-acre cattle ranch in Joseph, Oregon, is one of the great American stories. In the first biography of this epic figure, Carl Rollyson reveals Brennan's consummate mastery of virtually every kind of role while playing against and often stealing scenes from such stars as Gary Cooper, Humphrey Bogart, and John Wayne. Rollyson fully explores Brennan's work with Hollywood's greatest directors, such as Howard Hawks, John Ford, and Fritz Lang. As a father and grandfather, Brennan instilled generations of his family with an outlook on the American Dream that remains a sustaining feature of their lives today. His conservative politics, which grew out of his New England upbringing and his devout Catholicism, receive meticulous attention and a balanced assessment in A Real American Character. Written with the full cooperation of the Brennan family and drawing on material in archives from every region of the United States, this new biography presents an artist and family man who lived and breathed an American idealism that made him the Real McCoy.

Delaplaine s repository of the lives and portraits of distinguished American characters

Delaplaine s repository of the lives and portraits of distinguished American characters
Author: Joseph Delaplaine
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 314
Release: 1815
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: OXFORD:590293636

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The Columbian Plutarch Or an Exemplification of Several Distinguished American Characters

The Columbian Plutarch  Or  an Exemplification of Several Distinguished American Characters
Author: Thomas WOODWARD (Biographer.)
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 330
Release: 1819
Genre: Electronic Book
ISBN: BL:A0026884574

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Tocqueville on American Character

Tocqueville on American Character
Author: Michael A. Ledeen
Publsiher: Truman Talley Books
Total Pages: 206
Release: 2001-10-05
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780312274511

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In 1831, Alexis De Tocqueville, a twenty-six-year-old French aristocrat, spent nine months travelling across the United States. From the East Coast to the frontier, from the Canadian border to New Orleans, Tocqueville observed the American people and the revolutionary country they'd created. His celebrated Democracy in America, the most quoted work on America ever written, presented the new Americans with a degree of understanding no one had accomplished before or has since. Astonished at the pace of daily life and stimulated by people at all levels of society, Tocqueville recognized that Americans were driven by a series of internal conflicts: simultaneously religious and materialistic; individualistic and yet deeply involved in community affairs; isolationist and interventionist; pragmatic and ideological. Noted author Michael Ledeen takes a fresh look at Tocqueville's insights into our national psyche and asks whether Americans' national character, which Tocqueville believed to be wholly admirable, has fallen into moral decay and religious indifference. Michael Ledeen's sparkling new exploration has some surprising answers and provides a lively new look at a time when character is at the center of our national debate.

Judicial Power and American Character

Judicial Power and American Character
Author: Robert F. Nagel
Publsiher: Oxford University Press, USA
Total Pages: 199
Release: 1996-04-11
Genre: Law
ISBN: 9780195106626

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This book examines judicial power as an integral part of our increasingly anxious and intolerant society. Nagel shows how constitutional politics embodies cultural tendencies toward moral evasiveness, privatization, and opportunism, and that judicial decisions often censor important beliefs and traditions. Ranging widely over topics such as Clarence Thomas' confirmation, abortion, flag-burning, and gay rights, the analysis crosses conventional political and philosophical lines to conclude that the real protection for legal values lies in robust politics.

Character in the American Experience

Character in the American Experience
Author: Bruce Frohnen,Ted V. McAllister
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 209
Release: 2022
Genre: National characteristics, American
ISBN: 9781666914511

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"Character in the American Experience: An Unruly People tells the story of the American character, from its earliest beginnings to the present day. Bruce P. Frohnen and Ted V. McAllister detail how great events and daily life have both shaped and been shaped by a people committed to order and independence, community and conflict, as well as the triumphs and tragedies American unruliness produced"--

American Character

American Character
Author: Colin Woodard
Publsiher: Penguin
Total Pages: 320
Release: 2016-03-15
Genre: History
ISBN: 9780698181717

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The author of American Nations examines the history of and solutions to the key American question: how best to reconcile individual liberty with the maintenance of a free society The struggle between individual rights and the good of the community as a whole has been the basis of nearly every major disagreement in our history, from the debates at the Constitutional Convention and in the run up to the Civil War to the fights surrounding the agendas of the Federalists, the Progressives, the New Dealers, the civil rights movement, and the Tea Party. In American Character, Colin Woodard traces these two key strands in American politics through the four centuries of the nation’s existence, from the first colonies through the Gilded Age, Great Depression and the present day, and he explores how different regions of the country have successfully or disastrously accommodated them. The independent streak found its most pernicious form in the antebellum South but was balanced in the Gilded Age by communitarian reform efforts; the New Deal was an example of a successful coalition between communitarian-minded Eastern elites and Southerners. Woodard argues that maintaining a liberal democracy, a society where mass human freedom is possible, requires finding a balance between protecting individual liberty and nurturing a free society. Going to either libertarian or collectivist extremes results in tyranny. But where does the “sweet spot” lie in the United States, a federation of disparate regional cultures that have always strongly disagreed on these issues? Woodard leads readers on a riveting and revealing journey through four centuries of struggle, experimentation, successes and failures to provide an answer. His historically informed and pragmatic suggestions on how to achieve this balance and break the nation’s political deadlock will be of interest to anyone who cares about the current American predicament—political, ideological, and sociological.

Sketches of American Character

Sketches of American Character
Author: Sarah Josepha Buell Hale
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 304
Release: 1831
Genre: American fiction
ISBN: HARVARD:32044011427655

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