PDF Lincoln Dreamt He Died The Midnight Visions of Remarkable Americans from Colonial Times to Freud Andrew Burstein 9781137279163 Books
Before Sigmund Freud made dreams the cornerstone of understanding an individual's inner life, Americans shared their dreams unabashedly with one another through letters, diaries, and casual conversation. In this innovative book, highly regarded historian Andrew Burstein goes back for the first time to discover what we can learn about the lives and emotions of Americans, from colonial times to the beginning of the modern age. Through a thorough study of dreams recorded by iconic figures such as John and Abigail Adams, Thomas Jefferson, and Abraham Lincoln, as well as everyday men and women, we glimpse the emotions of earlier generations and understand how those feelings shaped their lives and careers, thus gaining a fuller, multi-dimensional sense of our own past. No one has ever looked at the building blocks of the American identity in this way, and Burstein reveals important clues and landmarks that show the origins of the ideas and values that remain central to who we are today.
PDF Lincoln Dreamt He Died The Midnight Visions of Remarkable Americans from Colonial Times to Freud Andrew Burstein 9781137279163 Books
"Andrew Burstein has discovered an entirely new lode of historical artifacts for students of past America, at the same time providing much for non-historians to chew over. Entertaining and very original thinking, wonderfully written, and so much impressive research! I will keep it on my reference shelf for any encounters with recorded dreams, knowing I will get much more out of reading them than before."
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Lincoln Dreamt He Died The Midnight Visions of Remarkable Americans from Colonial Times to Freud Andrew Burstein 9781137279163 Books Reviews :
Lincoln Dreamt He Died The Midnight Visions of Remarkable Americans from Colonial Times to Freud Andrew Burstein 9781137279163 Books Reviews
- Andrew Burstein is a gifted author whose works on Jefferson led me to this one... check out... Letters from the Heart and Head.... The Inner Jefferson Portrait of a Grieving Optimist... Madison and Jefferson co-authored with Nancy Isenberg.... and Jefferson's Secret... I am a huge fan of any of Dr. Burstein's work... His writing is a rare and intuitive talent...
- Andrew Burstein has discovered an entirely new lode of historical artifacts for students of past America, at the same time providing much for non-historians to chew over. Entertaining and very original thinking, wonderfully written, and so much impressive research! I will keep it on my reference shelf for any encounters with recorded dreams, knowing I will get much more out of reading them than before.
- I am trying very hard to enjoy this book.
I think the subject matter is very interesting, the author writes well and presents wonderful examples of dreams. I also think he is very knowedgable regarding the subject, and that is why my enjoyment tends to wane a bit.
There are instances where he seems to "proving a point" but the facts are not always there to support it. There are times I feel he was in the midst of writing a point, then went back and deleted a bit that should have remained. I suspect he knows the subject so well that he forget the reader may not be on the same level as him. And, to be fair, I think that is something a good editor should be addressing.
For me, it detracts the book a bit but it is certainly worth a read. - This is the first one of my father's books I was excited to read, if that's not a shining review, I don't know what is.
This rogue idea is a chronicle of the subconscious, before any Freudian interpretation. After living in library stacks with Professor Burstein growing up, I can attest this book is a wealth of original insights, well-researched stuff, on Abe's psyche, Twain's psyche, lots to chew through... some random colonial sex dreams sprinkled in.
Essentially, in a genre that asks historians and journalists alike to retell the same stories of revered heroes and villains time and time again -- this book is a risk. This is the indie darling that tries to peel away existing constructs of legacy and lore and decipher what these humans believed – their fears and anxieties and passions – through never before researched documents and letters of centuries past.
This is not a history book. This is not Psychology Today. This is a chronology of The American Dream.
And that's pretty novel and worth a read. - Great book on dreams by some of the historical figures in History. I knew some, didn't know others. The John Adams story with Dr. Rush is worth reading the book. You will love it.