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12+ Werke 813 Mitglieder 7 Rezensionen

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Alfred F. Young is Emeritus Professor of History at Northern Illinois University and Senior Research Fellow at the Newberry Library in Chicago.
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Very detailed and well researched. Can be a bit difficult to read and follow but the amount of detail included makes it worth the effort.
The book takes on a journalistic approach, asking how, why, and when for some of the biggest pre-war events in Boston.
A great addition to any reader who wishes to maximize their knowledge and potentially embrace the mindset of the 18th century Boston colonials.
 
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trueblueglue | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Nov 23, 2023 |
Authorlooks at groups of people usually overlooked by academic historians: Native Americans, Slaves, apprentices and indentured servants, and women. He does this by examing primary sources such as tools, clothing, documents, artwork, etc.
 
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MWMLibrary | Jan 14, 2022 |
The American Revolution was not one event, and the conflicts (civil war, and war with England) cannot be understood unless one learns the context of tradition (people identified as English), and the discussions that happened to affect change. Must read!
 
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HMGThomas | Feb 24, 2016 |
That was a lot of facts smooshed into only 300 or so pages (as an aside I'm not sure I've ever read a book, even a historical non-fiction one, with so many notes in the back).

The book was about Deborah Samson Gannett of Massachusetts, on of the most well known women to disguise themselves as a man and join the Continental Army. Not the only one, but one of the most successful. And, this book, unlike a lot of the other works about her, this was about her entire life, birth to death, not just one part, like her speaking tour, or her time in the army.

On the whole it was a good book, though a bit wordy. I really love that the author found out that, using Deborah's spelling her her diary during her speaking tour and a few of her letters that she may have had quite the Mass. accent. (Pahk the Cah, will ya, of course, they didn't have cars yet, so that may be a bad example of the accent, hers was more like she spelled audience with an o... etc.)

But, I didn't love it all. Even though here and there the author sort of barely allows that Deborah may have flirted with or had a relationship with a woman or two, he repeatedly states that it's totally and utterly 'improbable'. But, that's heteronormative HIStory for you. Although, to be fair to this author, Deborah Samson's original biographer Herman Mann was even worse, wildly vacillating between depicting Deborah in more 'animal love' (not platonic love) situations with women to 'lalalalala' she couldn't even physically have sex with another woman 'lalalala'.

Maybe she was straight, maybe she wasn't, but while in his final chapter the author gives sixteen paragraphs to whether or not she was a person of color, he only gives five to whether or not she had any same sex relationships. More HIStory.

So, a good book, sure, and the author obviously put a ton of research into it, but not a great book.
… (mehr)
 
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DanieXJ | Mar 22, 2012 |

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12
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813
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