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
In Praise of Valiant American Women
How Barbie Dolls Up the Plasticity of our Surreal Times
Can the Men Be Saved?
The Gutenberg Parenthesis
Why Julian Barnes Will Never Write a Memoir or Autobiography
Why Conservatives Should Fear & Loathe AI
How To Be a Wise Teacher
The Netscape Moment When AI Gets a Brain
Imaging the Animal World as Nature's Great Maintenance Crew
Why the "very very excellent" OPPENHEIMER is a complicated film for our complex times
The Hidden History of American Democracy
Episode 1610: Our Oppenheimer Moment
Episode 1609: Why America Dominates the World