Illuminating history A retrospective of seven decades

Bernard Bailyn

Book - 2020

"A series of brilliant historical portraits combine to create a self-portrait of one of our greatest historians. With characteristic vitality and brilliance, Bernard Bailyn revisits the major phases of his long, pathbreaking career and offers readers new insights into history and his distinctive approach to understanding it. From his early work on the New England merchants through his groundbreaking study of the American Revolution and on into his long engagement with the peopling of America in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries, Bailyn draws us into characters and events in fascinating detail. One chapter focuses on the Boston merchant Robert Keayne, tormented by the conflicts between his Puritan religious beliefs and his drive ...to succeed in business. Another gives us the unforgettable Harbottle Dorr, a Boston tradesman who slices out newspaper accounts of British tyranny and assembles them into massive, annotated scrapbooks that scream with outrage at the affronts to American liberty. Johann Conrad Beissel, a German mystic, comes to life in another chapter on the sect-like Ephrata community he founded in the area of Germantown, PA. The eighteenth century German pietist community followed eccentric sexual and dietary practices in keeping with their strange, hallucinatory religious visions. Beissel was also a genius of musical composition. His distinctive harmonies found beautiful expression in the haunting singing of the congregation. The energetic portraits of "luminous individuals," vivid and often funny, coalesce into a selfportrait of the author, the great historian"--

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Subjects
Genres
Autobiographies
Biographies
Published
New York, NY : W. W. Norton & Company, Inc [2020]
Language
English
Main Author
Bernard Bailyn (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
xii, 270 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages [249]-254) and index.
ISBN
9781324005834
  • List of Illustrations
  • Introduction: Entering the Past
  • I. Keayne's Will, "All of It Written With My Owne Hands": Puritanism's Double Bind
  • II. Laslett's Clayworth: Andover and Heidenreichstein: The Variant Structures of Family Life
  • III. Harbottle's Index, Johnson's "Connection," and the Villagers' Theories of Government: The Penetration of Revolutionary Thought
  • IV. Beissel's Ephrata and the Music of the Spheres: Utopian Flowering in an Unencumbered Land
  • V. The Hutchinsons' Network and Beyond: The Contours of Atlantic History
  • Epilogue: The Elusive Past
  • Appendix: Morison and Handlin
  • Acknowledgments
  • Notes
  • Illustration Credits
  • Text Credits
  • Index
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Harvard University professor emeritus Bailyn (The Ideological Origins of the American Revolution) highlights "small, strange, obscure, but illuminating documents or individuals" he encountered while researching other, larger projects in this hodgepodge of a book. Successful chapters, including the close reading of a will left by a Puritan merchant and an overview of changing interpretations of 17th-century census records, showcase the creativity inherent in the study of history and the conversational nature of scholarship, illustrating Bailyn's belief that "the historical imagination must be closely bounded by the documentation." Unfortunately, no effort is made to connect the individual documents and historical figures (which also include an index of colonial newspapers and the religious sect leader who inspired Thomas Mann's Doctor Faustus) to each other, and as the book progresses, the law of diminishing returns sets in. One chapter catalogues topics discussed at a series of seminars on Atlantic history; the book's epilogue consists largely of extended excerpts from previous publications. Though readers may glimpse the masterly scholarship and clear writing that distinguish Bailyn's work, the book's inconsistency and lack of an overarching thesis lead to a disappointing result. History buffs will be left hoping for a more substantial account of Bailyn's life and career. (Apr.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

An eminent historian reveals inspirations and serendipitous discoveries.Bailyn (Emeritus, History/Harvard Univ.; Sometimes an Art: Nine Essays on History, 2015, etc.), who has won the Pulitzer Prize (twice), the National Book Award, the Bancroft Prize, and the National Humanities Medal, offers a fascinating reflection on intellectual enthusiasms and challenges that have marked his long, prolific career. In 1946, after serving in the Army, the author began graduate school with an interest in Colonial America, aiming to examine connections between America and Europe and particularly "the connections between ideas and reality' " in the daily lives of ordinary individuals and families. Deftly melding memoir and historiography, Bailyn recounts several significant projects that were shaped by unexpected findings, "one or more obscure documents or individuals that in themselves, in some peculiar way, illuminated the greater picture." His quest to examine the effect of the Puritans' religious beliefs on early New England's economy, for example, was advanced by a 48,000-word last will and testament of "an avaricious but profoundly pious tradesman" who candidly reviewed the events of his life in the context of his "self-denying but aspirational" conception of religion. In investigating family life among the early settlers, Bailyn confronted feisty controversies among scholars, fueled by contrasting analyses of demographic data, genealogies, land transfer documents, and family histories. The American Revolution occupied the author for decades, leading him to ask how widely and deeply the Founders' ideology penetrated daily life. Researching that question, he discovered an astounding archive of 3,280 pages of newspapers annotated and indexed by a Boston shopkeeper: a rare response to the turmoil of the times. "The search for interior experiencesfor sudden, unexpected signs" can never be systematic, Bailyn observes, but they inform a constant revision of the sense of the past. History, he writes, "is an imaginative construction," like fiction, but bound by documentation. The historian must be an agile storyteller, always relying on evidence. "You can't disprove a novel," he writes, "but you can disprove history; and that seems to me all the difference in the world."A privilege for history buffs from a master of the craft. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.