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Condition
Like New
A book in excellent condition. Cover is shiny and undamaged, and the dust jacket is included for hard covers. No missing or damaged pages, no creases or tears, and no underlining/highlighting of text or writing in the margins. May be very minimal identifying marks on the inside cover. Very minimal wear and tear. See all condition definitionsopens in a new window or tab
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“Used - Like New”
Book Title
The Four Freedoms: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Evolution of ...
ISBN
9780199376216
Publication Year
2015
Type
Textbook
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Publication Name
Four Freedoms : Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Evolution of an American Idea
Item Height
0.9in
Author
Jeffrey A. Engel
Item Length
6.1in
Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
Item Width
9.4in
Item Weight
16 Oz
Number of Pages
248 Pages

About this product

Product Information

The specter of global war loomed large in President Franklin Roosevelt's mind as 1941 began. He believed the United States had a role to play in the battle against Nazi and fascist aggression already underway in Europe. Isolationists, political opponents, and arguably the majority of Americans disagreed. The wounds of the First World War had not yet fully healed, while the Great Depression largely still raged.The words he used to rally the nation towards war ultimately defined not only what Americans fought for in World War II, but how they defined themselves as a people for generations after. Roosevelt framed America's role in the conflict, and ultimately its role in forging the post-war world to come, as a question of freedom. Four freedoms, to be exact: freedom of speech, freedom from want, freedom of religion, and freedom from fear.His words inspired, but more importantly his four freedoms formed the basis for how ensuing generations of Americans conceive of liberty for themselves and for the world. Six scholars come together in this volume to explore how each of Roosevelt's freedoms evolved over time, for Americans and for the wider world, while additionally showing why Roosevelt spoke as he did, and how our understand of his words has evolved over time.The Four Freedoms: Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Evolution of an American Idea explores this moment of history, and the evolution of each of the four freedoms from those dark days of 1940 to the present day.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Oxford University Press, Incorporated
ISBN-10
0199376212
ISBN-13
9780199376216
eBay Product ID (ePID)
205522791

Product Key Features

Author
Jeffrey A. Engel
Publication Name
Four Freedoms : Franklin D. Roosevelt and the Evolution of an American Idea
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Publication Year
2015
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
248 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
6.1in
Item Height
0.9in
Item Width
9.4in
Item Weight
16 Oz

Additional Product Features

Lc Classification Number
Jc585
Reviews
"[I]lluminates Roosevelt's 'contribution' to the 'evolution and import of freedom as a concept and as an ideological tool' and examines how those ideas were contested, implemented, altered, limited, and abandoned in both the United States and across the world (p. 13)."--Richard F. Hamm, H-FedHist "The book is well conceived and should be of interest to academic specialists and accessible for advanced undergraduates .Contributors tackle their topics with depth and skill, making this book a welcome addition to the canon on FDR and his legacy."--Margaret C. Rung, History "This stellar collection demonstrates the centrality of FDR's Four Freedoms to America's domestic political regimes and its place in the international order from 1941 to the present day. The incisive essays examine how the meaning of these freedoms changed over time and which of Roosevelt's hopes were left unfulfilled. Indispensable to any serious student of modern America and any observer of contemporary politics."--Anthony J. Badger, author of FDR: The First Hundred Days "The concept of freedom is endemic to the American creed but its meaning has long been subject to interpretation. Jeffrey Engel's cogent and incisive The Four Freedoms examines the seminal importance of Franklin Roosevelt's expression of freedom as an American ideal--delivered at a crossroads in our history--and what it means to our nation and the world today."--Mark K. Updegrove, director of the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library "Four Freedoms recaptures the context and significance of Roosevelt's commitment to this iconic set of values. Offered during a time of international strife, the vision outlined by FDR transcended that immediate context. The authors of this volume illuminate how and why this moral vision and its universalistic language framed America's self-image long after the end of World War II."--Brian Balogh, author of The Associational State: American Governance in the Twentieth Century and co-host of Backstory with the American History Guys "Exemplary."--H-Net "[A] thoughtful book." -Foreign Affairs, "This stellar collection demonstrates the centrality of FDR's Four Freedoms to America's domestic political regimes and its place in the international order from 1941 to the present day. The incisive essays examine how the meaning of these freedoms changed over time and which of Roosevelt's hopes were left unfulfilled. Indispensable to any serious student of modern America and any observer of contemporary politics."--Anthony J. Badger, author of FDR: The First Hundred Days "The concept of freedom is endemic to the American creed but its meaning has long been subject to interpretation. Jeffrey Engel's cogent and incisive The Four Freedoms examines the seminal importance of Franklin Roosevelt's expression of freedom as an American ideal--delivered at a crossroads in our history--and what it means to our nation and the world today."--Mark K. Updegrove, director of the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library "Four Freedoms recaptures the context and significance of Roosevelt's commitment to this iconic set of values. Offered during a time of international strife, the vision outlined by FDR transcended that immediate context. The authors of this volume illuminate how and why this moral vision and its universalistic language framed America's self-image long after the end of World War II."--Brian Balogh, author of The Associational State: American Governance in the Twentieth Century and co-host of Backstory with the American History Guys "Exemplary."--H-Net "[A] thoughtful book." -Foreign Affairs, "This stellar collection demonstrates the centrality of FDR's Four Freedoms to America's domestic political regimes and its place in the international order from 1941 to the present day. The incisive essays examine how the meaning of these freedoms changed over time and which of Roosevelt's hopes were left unfulfilled. Indispensable to any serious student of modern America and any observer of contemporary politics."-Anthony J. Badger, author of FDR: The First Hundred Days "The concept of freedom is endemic to the American creed but its meaning has long been subject to interpretation. Jeffrey Engel's cogent and incisive The Four Freedoms examines the seminal importance of Franklin Roosevelt's expression of freedom as an American ideal--delivered at a crossroads in our history--and what it means to our nation and the world today." -Mark K. Updegrove, director of the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library "Four Freedoms recaptures the context and significance of Roosevelt's commitment to this iconic set of values. Offered during a time of international strife, the vision outlined by FDR transcended that immediate context. The authors of this volume illuminate how and why this moral vision and its universalistic language framed America's self-image long after the end of World War II."-Brian Balogh, author of The Associational State: American Governance in the Twentieth Century and co-host of Backstory with the American History Guys, "As the first-class contributors of this volume argue, there is something even more genuinely American than the concept of freedom itself. That is the idea of the Four Freedoms, as president Franklin D. Roosevelt expounded it at the beginning of 1941....The book surely remains a milestone for those, students and scholars, who intend to dig deeper into FDR's rhetoric, political acumen, and complex worldview, but it also represents a good source for those who areinterested in the origins and development of the American century, as well as in the rise and fall of the American empire."--Dario Fazzi, European Journal for American Studies"[I]lluminates Roosevelt's 'contribution' to the 'evolution and import of freedom as a concept and as an ideological tool' and examines how those ideas were contested, implemented, altered, limited, and abandoned in both the United States and across the world (p. 13)."--Richard F. Hamm, H-FedHist"The book is well conceived and should be of interest to academic specialists and accessible for advanced undergraduates .Contributors tackle their topics with depth and skill, making this book a welcome addition to the canon on FDR and his legacy."--Margaret C. Rung, History"This stellar collection demonstrates the centrality of FDR's Four Freedoms to America's domestic political regimes and its place in the international order from 1941 to the present day. The incisive essays examine how the meaning of these freedoms changed over time and which of Roosevelt's hopes were left unfulfilled. Indispensable to any serious student of modern America and any observer of contemporary politics."--Anthony J. Badger, author of FDR: TheFirst Hundred Days"The concept of freedom is endemic to the American creed but its meaning has long been subject to interpretation. Jeffrey Engel's cogent and incisive The Four Freedoms examines the seminal importance of Franklin Roosevelt's expression of freedom as an American ideal--delivered at a crossroads in our history--and what it means to our nation and the world today."--Mark K. Updegrove, director of the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library"Four Freedoms recaptures the context and significance of Roosevelt's commitment to this iconic set of values. Offered during a time of international strife, the vision outlined by FDR transcended that immediate context. The authors of this volume illuminate how and why this moral vision and its universalistic language framed America's self-image long after the end of World War II."--Brian Balogh, author of The Associational State: AmericanGovernance in the Twentieth Century and co-host of Backstory with the American History Guys"Exemplary."--H-Net"[A] thoughtful book."--Foreign Affairs, "As the first-class contributors of this volume argue, there is something even more genuinely American than the concept of freedom itself. That is the idea of the Four Freedoms, as president Franklin D. Roosevelt expounded it at the beginning of 1941....The book surely remains a milestone for those, students and scholars, who intend to dig deeper into FDR's rhetoric, political acumen, and complex worldview, but it also represents a good source for those who are interested in the origins and development of the American century, as well as in the rise and fall of the American empire."--Dario Fazzi, European Journal for American Studies "[I]lluminates Roosevelt's 'contribution' to the 'evolution and import of freedom as a concept and as an ideological tool' and examines how those ideas were contested, implemented, altered, limited, and abandoned in both the United States and across the world (p. 13)."--Richard F. Hamm, H-FedHist "The book is well conceived and should be of interest to academic specialists and accessible for advanced undergraduates .Contributors tackle their topics with depth and skill, making this book a welcome addition to the canon on FDR and his legacy."--Margaret C. Rung, History "This stellar collection demonstrates the centrality of FDR's Four Freedoms to America's domestic political regimes and its place in the international order from 1941 to the present day. The incisive essays examine how the meaning of these freedoms changed over time and which of Roosevelt's hopes were left unfulfilled. Indispensable to any serious student of modern America and any observer of contemporary politics."--Anthony J. Badger, author of FDR: The First Hundred Days "The concept of freedom is endemic to the American creed but its meaning has long been subject to interpretation. Jeffrey Engel's cogent and incisive The Four Freedoms examines the seminal importance of Franklin Roosevelt's expression of freedom as an American ideal--delivered at a crossroads in our history--and what it means to our nation and the world today."--Mark K. Updegrove, director of the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library "Four Freedoms recaptures the context and significance of Roosevelt's commitment to this iconic set of values. Offered during a time of international strife, the vision outlined by FDR transcended that immediate context. The authors of this volume illuminate how and why this moral vision and its universalistic language framed America's self-image long after the end of World War II."--Brian Balogh, author of The Associational State: American Governance in the Twentieth Century and co-host of Backstory with the American History Guys "Exemplary."--H-Net "[A] thoughtful book."--Foreign Affairs, "This stellar collection demonstrates the centrality of FDR's Four Freedoms to America's domestic political regimes and its place in the international order from 1941 to the present day. The incisive essays examine how the meaning of these freedoms changed over time and which of Roosevelt's hopes were left unfulfilled. Indispensable to any serious student of modern America and any observer of contemporary politics."-Anthony J. Badger, author of FDR: The First Hundred Days "The concept of freedom is endemic to the American creed but its meaning has long been subject to interpretation. Jeffrey Engel's cogent and incisive The Four Freedoms examines the seminal importance of Franklin Roosevelt's expression of freedom as an American ideal--delivered at a crossroads in our history--and what it means to our nation and the world today." -Mark K. Updegrove, director of the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library "Four Freedoms recaptures the context and significance of Roosevelt's commitment to this iconic set of values. Offered during a time of international strife, the vision outlined by FDR transcended that immediate context. The authors of this volume illuminate how and why this moral vision and its universalistic language framed America's self-image long after the end of World War II."-Brian Balogh, author of The Associational State: American Governance in the Twentieth Century and co-host of Backstory with the American History Guys "Exemplary."-H-Net, "[I]lluminates Roosevelt's 'contribution' to the 'evolution and import of freedom as a concept and as an ideological tool' and examines how those ideas were contested, implemented, altered, limited, and abandoned in both the United States and across the world (p. 13)."--Richard F. Hamm, H-FedHist "The book is well conceived and should be of interest to academic specialists and accessible for advanced undergraduates .Contributors tackle their topics with depth and skill, making this book a welcome addition to the canon on FDR and his legacy."--Margaret C. Rung, History "This stellar collection demonstrates the centrality of FDR's Four Freedoms to America's domestic political regimes and its place in the international order from 1941 to the present day. The incisive essays examine how the meaning of these freedoms changed over time and which of Roosevelt's hopes were left unfulfilled. Indispensable to any serious student of modern America and any observer of contemporary politics."--Anthony J. Badger, author of FDR: The First Hundred Days "The concept of freedom is endemic to the American creed but its meaning has long been subject to interpretation. Jeffrey Engel's cogent and incisive The Four Freedoms examines the seminal importance of Franklin Roosevelt's expression of freedom as an American ideal--delivered at a crossroads in our history--and what it means to our nation and the world today."--Mark K. Updegrove, director of the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library "Four Freedoms recaptures the context and significance of Roosevelt's commitment to this iconic set of values. Offered during a time of international strife, the vision outlined by FDR transcended that immediate context. The authors of this volume illuminate how and why this moral vision and its universalistic language framed America's self-image long after the end of World War II."--Brian Balogh, author of The Associational State: American Governance in the Twentieth Century and co-host of Backstory with the American History Guys "Exemplary."--H-Net "[A] thoughtful book."--Foreign Affairs, "As the first-class contributors of this volume argue, there is something even more genuinely American than the concept of freedom itself. That is the idea of the Four Freedoms, as president Franklin D. Roosevelt expounded it at the beginning of 1941....The book surely remains a milestone for those, students and scholars, who intend to dig deeper into FDR's rhetoric, political acumen, and complex worldview, but it also represents a good source for those who are interested in the origins and development of the American century, as well as in the rise and fall of the American empire."--Dario Fazzi, European Journal for American Studies"[I]lluminates Roosevelt's 'contribution' to the 'evolution and import of freedom as a concept and as an ideological tool' and examines how those ideas were contested, implemented, altered, limited, and abandoned in both the United States and across the world (p. 13)."--Richard F. Hamm, H-FedHist"The book is well conceived and should be of interest to academic specialists and accessible for advanced undergraduates .Contributors tackle their topics with depth and skill, making this book a welcome addition to the canon on FDR and his legacy."--Margaret C. Rung, History"This stellar collection demonstrates the centrality of FDR's Four Freedoms to America's domestic political regimes and its place in the international order from 1941 to the present day. The incisive essays examine how the meaning of these freedoms changed over time and which of Roosevelt's hopes were left unfulfilled. Indispensable to any serious student of modern America and any observer of contemporary politics."--Anthony J. Badger, author of FDR: The First Hundred Days"The concept of freedom is endemic to the American creed but its meaning has long been subject to interpretation. Jeffrey Engel's cogent and incisive The Four Freedoms examines the seminal importance of Franklin Roosevelt's expression of freedom as an American ideal--delivered at a crossroads in our history--and what it means to our nation and the world today."--Mark K. Updegrove, director of the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library"Four Freedoms recaptures the context and significance of Roosevelt's commitment to this iconic set of values. Offered during a time of international strife, the vision outlined by FDR transcended that immediate context. The authors of this volume illuminate how and why this moral vision and its universalistic language framed America's self-image long after the end of World War II."--Brian Balogh, author of The Associational State: American Governance in the Twentieth Century and co-host of Backstory with the American History Guys"Exemplary."--H-Net"[A] thoughtful book."--Foreign Affairs, "This stellar collection demonstrates the centrality of FDR's Four Freedoms to America's domestic political regimes and its place in the international order from 1941 to the present day. The incisive essays examine how the meaning of these freedoms changed over time and which of Roosevelt's hopes were left unfulfilled. Indispensable to any serious student of modern America and any observer of contemporary politics."-Anthony J. Badger, author of FDR: The First Hundred Days "The concept of freedom is endemic to the American creed but its meaning has long been subject to interpretation. Jeffrey Engel's cogent and incisive The Four Freedoms examines the seminal importance of Franklin Roosevelt's expression of freedom as an American ideal--delivered at a crossroads in our history--and what it means to our nation and the world today." -Mark K. Updegrove, director of the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library "Four Freedoms recaptures the context and significance of Roosevelt's commitment to this iconic set of values. Offered during a time of international strife, the vision outlined by FDR transcended that immediate context. The authors of this volume illuminate how and why this moral vision and its universalistic language framed America's self-image long after the end of World War II."-Brian Balogh, author of The Associational State: American Governance in the Twentieth Century and co-host of Backstory with the American History Guys "Exemplary."-H-Net "[A] thoughtful book." -Foreign Affairs, "The book is well conceived and should be of interest to academic specialists and accessible for advanced undergraduates .Contributors tackle their topics with depth and skill, making this book a welcome addition to the canon on FDR and his legacy."--Margaret C. Rung, History "This stellar collection demonstrates the centrality of FDR's Four Freedoms to America's domestic political regimes and its place in the international order from 1941 to the present day. The incisive essays examine how the meaning of these freedoms changed over time and which of Roosevelt's hopes were left unfulfilled. Indispensable to any serious student of modern America and any observer of contemporary politics."--Anthony J. Badger, author of FDR: The First Hundred Days "The concept of freedom is endemic to the American creed but its meaning has long been subject to interpretation. Jeffrey Engel's cogent and incisive The Four Freedoms examines the seminal importance of Franklin Roosevelt's expression of freedom as an American ideal--delivered at a crossroads in our history--and what it means to our nation and the world today."--Mark K. Updegrove, director of the Lyndon Baines Johnson Presidential Library "Four Freedoms recaptures the context and significance of Roosevelt's commitment to this iconic set of values. Offered during a time of international strife, the vision outlined by FDR transcended that immediate context. The authors of this volume illuminate how and why this moral vision and its universalistic language framed America's self-image long after the end of World War II."--Brian Balogh, author of The Associational State: American Governance in the Twentieth Century and co-host of Backstory with the American History Guys "Exemplary."--H-Net "[A] thoughtful book." -Foreign Affairs
Table of Content
INTRODUCTION: The Four Freedoms: FDR's Legacy of Liberty for the United States and the World-Jeffrey A. Engel, Southern Methodist University CHAPTER 1: The Scene, the Phrase, and the Debate-Jeffrey A. Engel, Southern Methodist University CHAPTER 2: Freedom of Speech-Linda Eads, Southern Methodist University CHAPTER 3: Freedom to Worship-Tisa Wenger, Yale University PHOTO ESSAY CHAPTER 4: Freedom from Want-Matthew Jones, London School of Economics CHAPTER 5: Freedom from Fear-Frank Costigliola, University of Connecticut CHAPTER 6: "Everywhere in the World": The Strange Career of the Four Freedoms since 1945-William Hitchcock, University of Virginia INDEX
Copyright Date
2015
Topic
United States / 20th Century, Modern / 20th Century, Social History, Presidents & Heads of State, Political Freedom
Lccn
2015-018909
Dewey Decimal
973.917092
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Dewey Edition
23
Illustrated
Yes
Genre
Biography & Autobiography, History, Political Science

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Item came quickly and efficiently. The book looks brand new, but did have a small sticker that did leave a small scratch on the side of the book when I took the sticker residue off. However, if your not looking for that issue you would not even notice it, because of that I am still giving this 5 stars.
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