Michigan Books
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For any who would think outside of the boxReview Date: 2005-10-10
Long-needed examination of sfReview Date: 2006-02-15

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Wittenberg Strikes Again!!Review Date: 2001-01-15
"Under Custer's Command" is sure to please any readers of his previous collections of James Kidd. This latest book, a well-preserved and edited anthology of the personal letters of the young colonel and brevet brigadier general continues Wittenberg's efforts to detail the wartime activities of the Michigan 6th Cavalry. One of the most successful mounted commands during the war, the "Wolverine's" received far less acclaim and few of the accolades enjoyed by cavalry units led by men such as Jeb Stuart and Stonewall Jackson.
"One of Custer's Wolverines" is an exceptionally well-written collection of personal letters. Kidd's abilities as a writer breath life into his experiences and observations. As one of the few existing collections of first-person accounts, Wittenber's latest book expands and improves on the legend of Custer's cavalry. This wonderful book is a fantastic addition to any serious Civil War Custer library.
This is wonderful stuff!Review Date: 2000-12-13
Collectible price: $14.95

InterestingReview Date: 2003-07-21
enjoy.
Great woman, great book.Review Date: 2000-06-19

Stimulating and Original FocusReview Date: 1999-12-02
Stimulating and Original FocusReview Date: 1999-12-02

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WonderfulReview Date: 2008-06-02
Otsego and PlainwellReview Date: 2007-01-09
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Collectible price: $65.00

An outstanding reference for herbalists.Review Date: 1999-02-17
ExcellentReview Date: 1999-05-26

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Fantastic Resource for Frazzled ParentsReview Date: 2006-07-29
Specific directory delivers on its promiseReview Date: 2006-08-26

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A Great Teacher, Wonderful BooksReview Date: 2001-01-02
An eye-opener !Review Date: 2001-06-11

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Delight for all agesReview Date: 2007-03-23
Must Have! The new children's classic!Review Date: 2007-02-28

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Republican orators move the slave power conspiracy rhetoric from the fringe to the mainstreamReview Date: 2006-06-16
In Chapter One, "Problems of Interpretation: Approaching Conspiracy in Text and Discourse," Pfau establishes his theoretical groundwork, but also focuses on the example of William Lloyd Garrison, to show how the paranoid style and conspiracy discourse was on the fringe of American politics, setting up how his three figures will move the slave power conspiracy of the radical abolitionists into the mainstream of American political rhetoric. Pfau focuses on how aristocrats and demagogues were established as traditional conspiratorial enemies, the creation of powerful slave narratives at the center of this rhetoric, and the shared ideology of civic republicanism that Chase, Sumner, and Lincoln grew up on. As the Republic Party emerged in the 1850s, Pfau establishes their goal as being to seek the center of the mainstream and then looks at the chronology of the Republican narrative of the slave power conspiracy in terms of the rhetoric of its most prominent mainstream politicians.
Chapter Two, "The Slave Power According to Salmon P. Chase: Entering the Mainstream of Partisan Rhetoric, 1845-1854," examines a pair of texts by Chase. The first is his 1845 "Address of the Southern and Western Liberty Convention," a major landmark in the political antislavery movement (as well as of slave power conspiracy rhetoric), and the second is his 1854 "Appeal to the Independent Democrats," which drove the anti-Nebraska movement that would coalesce into the Republican Party. Pfau underscores Chase's achievements as a party builder and see his texts as being pivotal examples of party mobilization. Towards that end Chase employs partisan rhetoric, civil republican ideology, and conspiracy narratives, which looking at the audiences Chase has targeted.
Chapter Three, "Charles Sumner's 'Crime against Kansas': Conspiracy Rhetoric in the Oratorical Mold," reminds us that there was a reason why Sumner was attacked and nearly beaten to death on the floor of the U.S. Senate by Preston Brooks in 1856. That was the year that Sumner delivered his philippic, "Crime Against Kansas," which is what Pfau examines. After looking at Sumner's political evolution from Whig to Free-Soil Senator, the essay looks at the text of the speech that was largely forgotten once Sumner was brutally assaulted. The speech is largely imitative of oratorical tradition of conspiracy going back to ancient times, but Pfau is again able to show how such elements combine again with civic republicanism. Pfau is also attuned to the fact the speech digresses at points, engaging more in personal attacks and insults than logical argument, but the emphasis is on how Sumner not only details "The Crime Against Kansas," but also attack the "apologizes" for the crime as additional evidence. Although Sumner speaks of a "true remedy," his final part of the speech covers a lot of possible remedies on the Kansas question.
Chapter Four, "Lincoln, Contemporary Rhetoric, and the 'House Divided': Assessing the Judgment of History," presents an analysis of the best-known text in this volume. Despite the viewpoint of Southerners to the contrary, Lincoln was not a radical within the Republican Party. Pfau looks at this famous speech as one of the best-known slave power conspiracy texts, which implicated Stephen Douglas as part of the well-coordinated conspiracy to nationalize slavery, and which has been condemned by scholars and critics in the last century. What Pfau reveals, to no one's surprise, is that Lincoln's speech is constructed on a move logical framework than either Chase or Sumner as Lincoln stands in the present and evaluates the past. There is a key section in the essay on Pluralist Preunderstandings and the Reception of the "House Divided" speech that deals with Douglas as a protopluralist and also with pluralist revisonism by later scholars and critics who argued popular sovereignty might have been a better policy than what Lincoln advocated. In the end, Pfau is able to make a case for Lincoln as the last in a long line of hortatory civic republican rhetors who succeeded in part because of their practice of conspiracy rhetoric.
Chapter Five, "Lessons of the Slave Power Conspiracy: Conspiracy Rhetoric at the Center and Fringe," explores the broader ramifications of Pfau's findings and suggests future avenues of research. In mapping the slave power conspiracy formation Pfau is able to talk about both sacred and secular ideologies. After talking about the two traditions of conspiracy discourse, namely those on the fringe and those in the center, Pfau is able to move on to contemporary conspiracy discourse and look at those two traditions today. The final lesson of this volume is that the marginalization of conspiracy discourse that has presumed such rhetoric to be both logically flawed and ethically problematic is undercut by the fact this political style is now indigenous to the mainstream of American political discourse. By the time Pfau finishes his book, such a conclusion seems patently obvious.
perspective of conspiracy toward opponents in pre-Civil War politicsReview Date: 2006-02-23
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