02528oam 22004694a 450 991081378790332120190815182403.00-8139-4253-5(CKB)4100000007695893(MiAaPQ)EBC5710135(OCoLC)1086210885(MdBmJHUP)muse73437(EXLCZ)99410000000769589320181101h20192019 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierHistorian in ChiefHow Presidents Interpret the Past to Shape the Future /edited by Seth Cotlar and Richard J. EllisCharlottesville ;London :University of Virginia Press,2019.1 online resource (297 pages)0-8139-4252-7 Includes bibliographical references and index.George Washington: his own historian / Edward Countryman -- Slavery, voice, and loyalty: John Quincy Adams as the first revisionist / David Waldstreicher -- Martin Van Buren, the democratic party, and the Jacksonian reinvention of the constitution / Elvin T. Lim -- Abraham Lincoln goes to the archives: slavery, the Cooper Union Address, and the election of 1860 / Jonathan Earle -- Theodore Roosevelt's historical consciousness and Lincoln's generous nationalism / Kathleen Dalton -- A scholar and his ghosts: Woodrow Wilson as historian in the White House / John Milton Cooper Jr. -- The ordeal of Paris: Herbert Hoover, Woodrow Wilson, and the search for peace / Charlie Laderman -- Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the problem of historical time / David Sehat -- Profiles in triangulation: John F. Kennedy's neoliberal history of American politics / Jeffrey L. Pasley -- Ronald Reagan's allegories of history / Rick Perlstein -- Barack Obama's use of American history / James T. Kloppenberg.Political cultureUnited StatesHistoryCollective memoryUnited StatesHistoryPresidentsUnited StatesAttitudesHistoryUnited StatesHistoriographyElectronic books. Political cultureHistory.Collective memoryHistory.PresidentsAttitudesHistory.306.20973Ellis Richard(Richard J.),Cotlar SethMdBmJHUPMdBmJHUPBOOK9910813787903321Historian in Chief4102908UNINA