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Product Description
Michael Kammen is widely regarded as one of our most important--and most diversely talented--cultural historians. David Brion Davis has said, "No other historian of [his] generation has such a broad and concrete grasp of 'American culture' in all its manifestations, from constitutional law to formal painting and popular culture." This engaging volume stands as rich and compelling evidence of that assertion. In the Past Lane collects writings from a span of more than ten years, covering the broad spectrum of Kammen's recent interests. Essay topics include the role of the historian, the relationship between culture and the State, uses of tradition in American commercial culture, American historical art, memory distortion in American history, the contested uses of history in American education, and others. The book will be seen as an important contribution to Kammen's wide-ranging scholarship--and to American cultural history proper.
"For professional historians or serious students of history, Kammen's essays provide an excellent opportunity to gauge how those who chronicle our past both influence and are influenced by national and personal experiences."--Booklist
Amazon.com Review
In this collection of essays, Pulitzer Prize-winner Michael Kammen delves into various issues of cultural history in America. Of particular interest is "Personal History and the Historian's Vocation," in which Kammen takes readers on something of a behind-the-scenes look at historians and how their personal lives (or heritage) influences their work. In other essays, Kammen examines the history of connections between the government and American culture, artistic representations of justice in America (right down to courthouse statuary), and the issue of "memory distortion" in American history.
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