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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
despite all its detail, a superficial hagiography that avoids tough questions, December 20, 2009
Having just read Chernow's Hamilton, I approached this volume with great anticipation: it favored Jefferson, I knew, and should present an exciting critical contrast to Chernow's masterpiece. Unfortunately, though this bio includes reams of fascinating detail, I was continually disappointed in its acceptance of Jefferson's words at face value and its complete and utter failure to address any of the hypocrisies that are evident to even the least questioning of readers.
The book covers a remarkable epoch, in which Jefferson was a key player. It starts with him in pre-revolutionary France, as an intimate diplomatic colleague of both Benjamin Franklin and John Adams. While the crucial period of the American revolution, with its vital support from France, was over, Jefferson took part in the ferment of the times, it would appear as a radical republican. The book goes into great detail on how the experience influenced his unique genius, from his friends to the 80 crates of books he shipped back to his frustrating efforts in Europe to correct the many erroneous accounts of American geography and politics. While his diplomatic work of that time was rather banal - it focused on commercial treaties, most of which failed - there is no question that Jefferson was a major Enlightenment figure, whose "rights of man" deserve immortality in the humanist canon. There is also much about his fascination with architecture, in particular his study of Palladio and certain Roman monuments.
Once he returns to the US, he takes the position of Secretary of State in the first cabinet, under Washington. In addition to a plethora of administrative issues, which the book covers in greater detail than anyone but a scholar would want, it was there that he began to fight Hamilton's grand schemes. The period is absolutely crucial because the modalities of how the government would operate were being created through interpretation of the constitution and the action that enabled. Malone presents the facts, but his interpretations reveal the serious deficiency of his approach.
First, to Malone, Jefferson's motives are always noble, and naturally superior to those of his adversaries. As such, Hamilton comes off as a evil grasper of power, a self-styled Napoleon (or George III, the specter that haunted Washington's presidency) who wants the government (as run by the elite) to intrude into the lives of ordinary citizens. Malone does not even discuss the validity of these propaganda stereotypes against Hamilton, but merely repeats them. The problem is that this is not just a partisan approach, but more an idolization of Jefferson, whom I believe was a great man with many flaws. Malone is almost never critical, but blithely dismissive of anything that might be interpreted as devious, self-seeking, or manipulative.
Second, Malone appears to believe that everything Jefferson said or wrote was sincere and well intentioned rather than also an ongoing construction of a political persona. This is either naive or disingenuous - the guy was a first-rate politician, perhaps one of the great early demagogues of American politics. He stood for the common man, brilliantly articulating his vision, yet lived the life of an aristocratic elitist, slaves, property, and all. I do not mean to imply insincerity or cynicism in Jefferson, whose words survive because of their originality and principles of liberty and republicanism, but he was unquesionably a master politician aware of his "brand."
Third, Malone glosses over anything that might make the reader question Jefferson's character. For example, he entirely avoids any mention that Sally Hemmings was a slave, calling her a "servant" instead; he never even broaches the subject of her concubinage or the fact that she was his wife's half sister. Far, far worse, Malone refuses to consider the underside of Jefferson's political machinations while in the cabinet. Yet Jefferson hired Freneau, the writer who became Hamilton's worst gadfly, into a sinecure in the Dept of State (for which he was unqualified), and even contributed anonymous articles to his newspaper undermining Hamilton's policies as approved by Washington - all while serving in the administration.
Fourth, many of Malone's assertions are tendentious and even erroneous. For example, he repeatedly claims that he had an excellent and intimate relationship with Washington, when in fact he called him "old mutton head" behind his back and worked relentlessly to undermine him politically. In the same way, he unconvincingly dismisses the Freneau episode as inconsequential and not as bad as it appears. I can only conclude that he does this to support the noble version of Jefferson at the expense of seeking the truth or at a minimum honestly addressing these issues. While some of the claims against Jefferson are surely propaganda from his adversaries, they deserve intelligent scrutiny that is completely lacking here.
Taken together, these deficiencies made me question everything that Malone claims. I could not trust his take on anything. Nonetheless, the book does evoke much of the time and presents many facts that the readers can interpret in their own way. It is also supremely well written. The 2-star rating is because the interpretation is so one-sided as to be ludicrous.
This book is a product of its time, I think, when America had emerged triumphant from WWII and fancied itself as a beacon for the rest of the world at the height of the McCarthyite period. There is great national pride in Malone's writing, much of it justifiable. But if you read it today, it comes off as a sentimental, biased, and uni-dimensional portrait, almost patriotic propaganda. It is academic mythmaking. That being said, the scholarship is monumental and this book deserves study and critical debate.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Overall, not quite as enjoyable as the first volume, June 30, 2007
This book is the second volume in Dumas Malone's six volume biography called "Jefferson and His Time". In the introduction Mr. Malone explains that, although he originally planned to cover Jefferson's life from the end of the Revolution and his appointment as Minister to France through the beginning of Jefferson's presidency as part of an originally projected 4 volume work, the depth of material required him to split this into two volumes.
From the outset his decision to expand his work into an extra volume (as he would also later do with the period covering Jefferson's presidency) seemed as it might be an unwelcome one. Mr. Malone's straightforward prose, that I enjoyed and appreciated in the fist volume, was replaced with a more scholarly and cumbersome style. Especially during the first half of the book, covering Mr. Jefferson's time in France, Mr. Malone's excessive and often redundant analysis at times made me feel like a hamster in a wheel. Part of the issue seems to stem from Mr. Malone's decision to abandon the chronological flow of the first volume for topic themed chapters with considerable chronological overlap. While this does serve to organize related information, it also leads to much of the redundancy mentioned earlier.
Luckily the second half of the volume, covering Mr. Jefferson's tenure as Secretary of State under George Washington's first term and the beginnings of his political rivalry with Alexander Hamilton, comes into much more distinct focus, and is very enjoyable.
I do not doubt that this volume is as Mr. Malone intended, although for me it was not as enjoyable to read as the first, and regardless of the intent of the author or the strength of the material presented, is the most important factor in making my recommendation. More specifically, the first half of the book would receive 3 stars and the second half the full 5.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
'Hagiography' Defined, January 26, 2011
The best that can be said of this, the second-volume of Dumas Malone's sweeping six-volume biography of our third president, is that it is impressively detailed. Though a considerable quality, the sheer scope of the work is not enough to overcome its crippling flaw: the staggering bias of its author in favor of his subject.
The first 240 pages of the book, which cover Jefferson's five years as a diplomat in France (1784-89), are, to put it mildly, a bit of a slog. Surprisingly little of consequence happens: Jefferson indulges his appetite for European luxury goods to the point of excess, carries on an affair with the married Maria Cosway, meets with little success in making treaties, observes the beginnings of the French Revolution, and plays a modest and indirect role in shaping revolutionary events through his counsel to Lafayette. It sounds more eventful than it actually is, it probably could have been covered in about half-the-space, and Malone's turgid prose makes it doubly tedious. Just as problematic, Malone fails to adequately convey just how this five-year French interlude changed, affected, or otherwise shaped Jefferson and his political philosophy. The reader is never given a sense of the importance of this period in Jefferson's life.
Thankfully, the pace picks up almost immediately upon Jefferson's return to the United States and his acceptance of the post of Secretary of State in Washington's administration, and it makes for an engaging read from that point forward. Spanning from 1789 through the 1792 elections, all the major developments are covered exhaustively - the dinner table bargain (assumption of state debts-for-a-Potomac capital); the battles over the national bank, implied powers, and the size of government; the birth of the republican "faction"; the newspaper wars; the growing and increasingly bitter internecine feud between Jefferson and Hamilton - as well as some lesser-known but no-less fascinating episodes in Jefferson's life, such as his oversight as Secretary of State of the planning and construction of Washington, D.C.. and his attempts to carve out a viable foreign policy for the nascent republic.
Notwithstanding the more compelling second-half, the entire book is plagued by Malone's naked idolatry of Jefferson. Whereas Hamilton's motivations are always claimed to be sinister, partisan, and borne of a lust for power, Jefferson's are without exception presented as sincere, pure, and honorable, and Malone blithely dismisses any contention of a Jefferson contemporary as to his remarkable duplicity and extensive political machinations as a partisan attack - while, of course, denying that same generous treatment to Hamilton vis-a-vis his opponents. What's more, Malone wholly suspends his critical eye towards Jefferson, always taking his subject's representations at face-value, unwilling to confront both the frequent contradictions between his words and actions and the reality that Jefferson was astutely aware he was writing for posterity. Jefferson was one of the most masterful political manipulators in human history, but the author here does everything possible to avoid coming to grips with that demonstrable fact. As a result, his characterizations of the antagonists are two-dimensional, with Jefferson cast as nothing short of a saint and Hamilton as a mustache-twirling villain.
In another manifest instance of bias, Malone excuses Jefferson's bald-faced lie to Adams that Jefferson was not referring to Adams' "Discourses on Davila" when he referred to "political heresies" in the foreword to Paine's "Rights of Man" on the grounds that Jefferson was just a very polite man and wanted to spare his old friend's feelings. This explanation is hogwash, as everyone already knew the reference was to Adams and Jefferson, in the same letter, disingenuously tried to blame a pseudonymous defense of Adams written by Adams' son for the vitriol then being directed at the Vice President from republican newspapers.
Likewise, Malone can't even bring himself to admit Jefferson's significant and obvious role in getting Freneau to create the National Gazette as an attack organ against the Administration. Jefferson offered Freneau an interpreter's job in the State Department for which he was wholly unqualified for, directed a substantial portion of the State Department's publishing business to Freneau's press, promised him access to the Department's collection of foreign newspapers, and expressly promised Freneau that the interpreter's job was not at all time-consuming and would leave him plenty of time to devote to his other enterprises - all after Jefferson wrote privately that he would do all he could to ensure Freneau's effort to establish a national republican newspaper was successful. Malone once again buries his head in the sand and writes it off as Jefferson just being hospitable to a friend of a friend (Madison) rather than recognizing it for what it was - Jefferson giving Freneau a nominal job and government printing business as a means of income in order to lessen the financial burdens of the paper and access to State information and resources so it could publish foreign stories. It truly is something when Malone tries to absolve Jefferson of a role to which Jefferson himself admitted!
Malone is unable or unwilling to see his subject's flaws and admit that Jefferson, in conjunction with Madison, was orchestrating the republican opposition behind-the-scenes and actively trying to subvert an administration of which he was a part.
As a result of such rampant bias, Malone loses all credibility and the analytic value of the work is irreparably compromised, rendering it useful only for narrow factual information.
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