Skip to content

Lincoln at Gettysburg The Words That Remade America

Best in textbook rentals since 2012!

ISBN-10: 0743299639

ISBN-13: 9780743299633

Edition: 2006

Authors: Garry Wills

List price: $18.99
Blue ribbon 30 day, 100% satisfaction guarantee!
what's this?
Rush Rewards U
Members Receive:
Carrot Coin icon
XP icon
You have reached 400 XP and carrot coins. That is the daily max!

The power of words has rarely been given a more compelling demonstration than in the Gettysburg Address. Lincoln was asked to memorialize the gruesome battle. Instead, he gave the whole nation "a new birth of freedom" in the space of a mere 272 words. His entire life and previous training, and his deep political experience went into this, his revolutionary masterpiece. By examining both the address and Lincoln in their historical moment and cultural frame, Wills breathes new life into words we thought we knew, and reveals much about a president so mythologized but often misunderstood. Wills shows how Lincoln came to change the world and to effect an intellectual revolution, how his words…    
Customers also bought

Book details

List price: $18.99
Copyright year: 2006
Publisher: Simon & Schuster
Publication date: 11/14/2006
Binding: Paperback
Pages: 320
Size: 6.13" wide x 9.25" long x 0.90" tall
Weight: 0.792
Language: English

Garry Wills, 1934 - Garry Wills was born in Atlanta, Georgia in 1934. Wills received a B.A. from St. Louis University in 1957, an M.A. from Xavier University of Cincinnati in 1958, an M.A. (1959) and a Ph.D. (1961) in classics from Yale. Wills was a junior fellow of the Center for Hellenic Studies from 1961-62, an associate professor of classics and adjunct professor of humanities at Johns Hopkins University from 1962-80. Wills was the first Washington Irving Professor of Modern American History and Literature at Union College, and was also a Regents Professor at the University of California in Santa Barbara, Silliman Seminarist at Yale, Christian Gauss Lecturer at Princeton, W.W. Cook…    

Key to Brief Citations
Prologue
Oratory of the Greek Revival
Gettysburg and the Culture of Death
The Transcendental Declaration
Revolution in Thought
Revolution in Style
Epilogue
Appendices
What Lincoln Said: The Text
Where He Said It: The Site
Four Funeral Orations
By Everett
By Pericles
By Gorgias
The Gettysburg Address
Spoken Text(?)
Final Text
Acknowledgments
Notes
Index to the Gettysburg Address
Index to Other Major Lincoln Texts
Name Index
Photo Credits