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John Brown: The Legend Revisited
 
 
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John Brown: The Legend Revisited [Hardcover]

Merrill D. Peterson (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 22, 2002

Few figures hold as mythic a place in America's historical consciousness as John Brown. A fervent abolitionist, his New England reserve tempered by a childhood on the Ohio frontier, Brown advocated arming fugitive slaves to fight for their freedom, an idea that impressed Frederick Douglass, Ralph Waldo Emerson, and Henry David Thoreau. In 1855, answering the call of his five sons to join them in the desperate struggle for freedom in the new territories, John Brown became a hero of "Bleeding Kansas." When he returned east, the fiery leader launched his ambitious campaign to rouse the slaves to freedom with a raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry in 1859.

Labeled a madman for his failed military adventure, and repudiated even by prominent antislavery leaders, Brown was tried in a Virginia court and sentenced to hang for treason and sundry other crimes. In John Brown: Legend Revisited, the eminent historian Merrill D. Peterson brings the same blend of sharp-eyed analysis and narrative elegance to bear on Brown's legacy that he has used to unravel the images of Thomas Jefferson and Abraham Lincoln.

Brown's reputation has undergone a series of tectonic shifts since he met his death on the gallows just before the Civil War. Southerners viewed his exploits with apprehension, seeing Harpers Ferry as a harbinger of servile insurrection, while Brown's eloquence before the court won him sympathy in the North and confirmed his place there as a hero and martyr. Thoreau, the author of passive resistance, wrote of Brown as a man of conscience. Perhaps most important historically, Brown's exploits convinced Southerners that Lincoln's election meant secession and a call to arms.

Peterson gives us Brown in his own day, but he also shows how the flaming abolitionist warrior's image, celebrated in art, literature, and journalism, has shed some of the infamy conferred by "Bleeding Kansas" to become a symbol of American idealism and fervor to activists along the political spectrum. And so in the civil rights battles of the twentieth century, Brown became a hero to African Americans.



Editorial Reviews

Review

A selection of the History Book Club



"An extraordinary work that traces the legend of this fascinating and complex man from Brown's own era to the present day.... A tour de force.

(Charles Dew, author of Bond of Iron and Apostles of Disunion )

Insightful.... First-rate.... In Peterson's chapters, the narrative flows easily between a discussion of the events of Brown's life and the dramatization of the events in prose, poetry, and the visual arts.

(H-Net Reviews )

.

About the Author

Merrill D. Peterson, Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Virginia, is the editor of the Library of America edition of the writings of Thomas Jefferson and author of numerous books, including Lincoln in American Memory and The Jefferson Image in the American Mind (Virginia).

(Washington Post Book World )

Merrill D. Peterson, Professor of History Emeritus at the University of Virginia, is the editor of the Library of America edition of the writings of Thomas Jefferson and author of numerous books, including Lincoln in American Memory and The Jefferson Image in the American Mind (Virginia). His latest, "Starving Armenians": America and the Armenian Genocide, 1915--1930 and After , is announced in this catalog.


Product Details

  • Hardcover: 176 pages
  • Publisher: University of Virginia Press; 1St Edition edition (October 22, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0813921325
  • ISBN-13: 978-0813921327
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 6.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.4 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,186,707 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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4 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars John Brown: The Legend Revisited, May 30, 2006
Some theologians make the distinction between the "Christ of Faith" and the "Jesus of History." The idea is that the Christ of Faith is the Christ mediated through the depictions of him in the New Testament, depictions that represent the writers' faith reaction to the phenomenon of Christ. The Jesus of History was the actual historical person, who we can know little if anything about, buried beneath the overlay of mythologizing that resulted in the Christ of Faith

Discovering the historical John Brown is certainly a more fruitful enterprise than discovering the Jesus of History, but John Brown as symbol and myth is quite fulsome. Merrill D. Peterson's John Brown: The Legend Revisited provides us with a good taste of the historical John Brown and a banquet of John Brown the symbol and myth.

The sketch of the historical Brown that Peterson provides us makes it clear how Brown could occasion some significant mythologizing about him. Brown is an enigmatic person, seemingly driven by forces he himself doesn't fully comprehend. Also, his background and experiences do not seem to fully account for the extremities to which he would take his abolitionist beliefs. His inexplicability creates vacuums teasingly available for the purposes of mythologizers.

It's here that Peterson work shines. He provides us with plethora of ways Brown has been depicted through time. The ways range from historical narratives to artistic and other creative representations. Not all the representations have been flattering.

I wish Peterson would have provided a deeper explication of the social and political forces and agendas that formed the kinds of representations and reputations that Brown the myth has received through time. Nevertheless, Peterson's work is a must read for Brown scholarship and his approach deserves high marks for its uniqueness.
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2 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars The Past Lives On In Books., August 14, 2006
John Brown had been born on May 9, 1800. By the time he and his sons pulled their stunt taking over the National Armory on October 16, 1859, he was fifty (that's old for that era). He was an abolitionist and religious zealot. His misbegotten mission was to make people release their slaves and create a stronghold in the Virgina/Maryland mountains for them to live in peace. His plan to liberate them using violence cost him the lives of two of his sons, Oliver (20 yrs. old) died on Oct. 17 and Watson (24) on the 18th from their fatal injuries. Joseph Barry wrote an indepth account of the captives and how they were caught in his book printed in 1903, 'The Strange Story of Harper's Ferry.' Here they were trying to liberate the blacks and the first victim was a black train porter there on the tracks leading to the bridge, which I found ironic. I took my sons and two nephews to Harper's Ferry and it is a quaint little place, there at three states. That part of Virginia near Sandy Hook where the Appalachian Trail meanders was later made into a new state called West Virginia. The whole population of the town was involved in this botched takeover.

Robert E. Lee and J. E. B. Stuart captured Brown's raiders; he was found guilty of treason against his country, conspiring with slaves to create an insurrection, and hanged on December 2, 1859. Stephen Vincent Benet wrote a long poem of the Civil War which became an American classic, first printed in 1927 and won the Pultizer Prize in 1929. In it, he wrote: "John Brown's body lies a-mouldering in the grave." That is the legend school children learn.

In September, 1862, the largest military operation against Harper's Ferry occurred prior to the Battle of Antietam when Stonewall Jackson's Confederate forces seized the town and captured the 12,500-man Union garrison, the largest surrender of troops during the Civil War. The first shot occurred at Fort Sumpter, S. C. on April 12, 1861, prior to the bloodiest battle of all at Antietam and the deadliest at Gettysburg, PA. John Penn Warren wrote about John Brown: 'The Making of a Martyr.' I'm glad this legend has now been reviewed to put the atrocity to bed for good. It as the damnest thing a demented person could do; how he ever thought he would get away with it beats me. He met his end at John Brown's Fort. It is an interesting place to visit, and gives that little state some semblance of importance.
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First Sentence:
NE w s o F the raid on the federal arsenal at Harpers Ferry, Virginia, sped like lightning over the telegraph wires Monday morning, October 17, 1859. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
old hero
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Harpers Ferry, New York, Charles Town, North Elba, United States, Governor Wise, New England, Frederick Douglass, Pottawatomie Massacre, Secret Six, Kennedy Farm, Abraham Lincoln, Captain Brown, Gerrit Smith, Engine House, Bleeding Kansas, Charles Robinson, Kansas State Historical Society, New-York Tribune, Owen Brown, Border Ruffians, Harriet Tubman, Hugh Forbes, Osawatomie Brown, South Carolina
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