How Jefferson Seduced America
Few biographers can claim to know what it feels like to be Thomas Jefferson more than the Charlottesville-based historian Andrew Burstein. The author of many books about Jefferson, Burstein’s latest, Being Thomas Jefferson, offers an “intimate history” of the great man. From Jefferson’s views on love and race to his take on mortality, Andrew Burstein gets inside America’s most controversial and misunderstood Founding Father. And what he finds at the end of his voyage inside Jefferson is an intellectual Don Juan. “Jefferson’s language is his legacy,” Burstein concludes. “He wrote with a musical cadence, poetically, at a time when most political writers did not understand what he did about seducing the reader”.
Keen On America is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit keenon.substack.com/subscribe
Get Out of My Way
In Defense of the Abraham Accords
Remembering a first Tweet with the same bewitching nostalgia as a first kiss
Why 1968 was the year that broke American politics and how this could be repeated in 2024
Why Greta Gerwig's BARBIE is Cynical and Vapid
Why So Many Smart People Are Turning Against Democracy
If We Can Be Taught How to Write, Then Why Not Also Be Educated in How to Love?
How to go from a small handful of book sales to top of the bestseller list via a 16 second Tiktok
How Landscape Architecture should get us to Pause and then Reconnect with Nature
Following the Dirty Money in Today's Globalized Entrepreneurial Underworld
How the High Price of Money is Wrecking the Venture Capital Industry
Hot Reads for the Heatwave
The New York Street that Changed American Art Forever