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The Invention of George Washington
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By Paul
K. Longmore |
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352
pages, 6-1/4 x 9-1/4 • Paper $18.50 |
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ISBN
0-8139-1872-3 |
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BY TRACING George Washington's deliberate
development from colonial planter and soldier to republican icon, Paul
Longmore answers the riddle of Washington's simultaneous fame and aloofness,
arriving at a portrait of Washington as a self-fashioning representative of
his turbulent time. As a young Virginia planter, Washington aspired to
virtues associated with the colonial gentry, but as the British system of
patronage threatened his own ambitions, he adopted the radical Whig
patriotism that would lead him to take up arms. As a national hero of the
Revolutionary War, and in accepting the presidency, Washington defended
civilian control of the military and other ideals of republican government
because his own image was inextricably tied to their success. The Invention
of George Washington, first published in hardcover in 1988, explores the
character of our first president in modern terms, but as Longmore shows,
Washington's assiduous cultivation of his own public image does not
ultimately diminish his extraordinary achievements as general and statesman. |
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Paul K. Longmore is Professor of History at San Francisco State
University. |
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