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Benjamin Franklin in American Thought and Culture, 1790-1990: Memoirs, American Philosophical Society (Vol. 211) (Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society)

Benjamin Franklin in American Thought and Culture, 1790-1990: Memoirs, American Philosophical Society (Vol. 211) (Memoirs of the American Philosophical Society)

Current price: $28.69
Publication Date: October 15th, 2024
Publisher:
American Philosophical Society Press
ISBN:
9781606189276
Pages:
288

Description

A teenage runaway whose face later appeared on the one-hundred-dollar bill, as well as the man who penned Poor Richard's Almanac and later helped shape the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution, Benjamin Franklin lived a life of wide-ranging dimension, talent, contradiction, and change. A printer, writer, publisher, inventor, scientist, philanthropist, and diplomat, he was a quintessential Renaissance man. Down-to-earth and pragmatic, self-educated and versatile, inquisitive and resourceful, witty and humorous, irreverent and rebellious, Franklin has come to embody emphatically American characteristics. How people have used, misused, interpreted, and reinterpreted his life and legacy provides a fascinating window through which to understand American history. Nian-Sheng Huang studies the historical figure of Franklin, not as an icon on a pedestal, but through the eyes, voices, perceptions, and public activities of ordinary Americans, in popular culture and across generations.

About the Author

Nian-Sheng Huang is an Emeritus Professor of History at California State University Channel Islands. He received his doctorate in history from Cornell University in 1990 and has been a productive scholar specializing in the life and legacy of Benjamin Franklin and American society.