Oxford History of the United States
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Edited by |
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Genre | Narrative history |
Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Media type | Books |
The Oxford History of the United States is an ongoing multivolume narrative history of the United States published by Oxford University Press. Conceived in the 1950s and launched in 1961 under the co-editorship of historians Richard Hofstadter and C. Vann Woodward, the series has been edited by David M. Kennedy since 1999.
Since its inception, the series editors have invited numerous historians to write for the Oxford History of the United States. Contracting authors and procuring manuscripts from them has been a perennial challenge for the series' publication. No author originally commissioned to write for the series has ultimately gone on to publish a volume with the Oxford History of the United States. Multiple authors have withdrawn from the series for a variety of reasons including health and age, and more than once editors have decided to ultimately reject an author's manuscript submission on the grounds of it not fitting the series.
The first book published in the series released in 1982. Since then, the series has published nine out of twelve planned volumes. Oxford University Press' original idea was to publish six volumes covering chronological eras and six volumes treating specific historical themes. The planned volumes changed, with more chronological volumes added to the series and planned volumes on economic and intellectual history cancelled.
Multiple books published in the series have received or been nominated for awards. Three received a Pulitzer Prize. Reviews have been mostly positive. Some volumes faced criticism for being "intellectually flabby".[1]
Publication history
[edit]Oxford University Press publishes multivolume "Oxford histories" that usually are intended to synthesize existing scholarship on a topic into general surveys rather than advance novel interpretations.[2] The press has previously published, in 1927, a two-volume history of the United States by Samuel Eliot Morison, titled The Oxford History of the United States, 1783–1917.[3]
Hofstadter and Woodward co-editorship
[edit]The Oxford History of the United States book series originated in the 1950s with a plan laid out by historians C. Vann Woodward and Richard Hofstadter for a multivolume history of the United States published by Oxford University Press, modeled on the Oxford History of England, that would provide a summary of the political, social, and cultural history of the United States for a general audience.[4] The press's initial vision was to publish six volumes about discrete periods of American history and six volumes about historical themes (such as economic history) across the entirety of the United States' history, though this plan did not remain in place.[5]
In 1961, Hofstadter and Woodward began their co-editorship, inviting scholars to write for the series and initially optimistic that they would receive many manuscripts, though the project proved to be more challenging than initially envisioned as they struggled to secure authors for volumes.[6] The series invites authors to write volumes, with the invitee having the option to accept or decline.[7] New fields of historical study emerged in the 1960s, and personal issues intervened for some of the authors.[8] Hofstadter and Woodward tried but failed to contract the Atlantic historian Bernard Bailyn for the series' volume on the American Revolution.[9] In 1962, the series contracted Stanley Elkins and Eric McKitrick—both former students of Woodward—to write a volume covering 1789 to 1815.[10] Kenneth M. Stampp signed to write the volume about the American Civil War, but he withdrew from the series; Woodward and Hofstadter replaced Stampp with William W. Freehling, who had initially signed to write the volume about the early nineteenth century, or Jacksonian era, replacing Freehling in turn with Charles Grier Sellers.[9] Among historians connected with the series at one time or another were Morton Keller, John Lewis Gaddis, Stanley Elkins and Eric McKitrick. Though some of these historians completed books as a result of their respective assignments, none of them was published as part of the series.[11]
Woodward editorship
[edit]Hofstadter died of leukemia in 1970, leaving Woodward as the series editor. That same year, Oxford University Press published its first formal announcement of the series and projected the following authors and volumes:[12]
- Colonial America by Alden Vaughan
- The Revolutionary Era by Merrill Jensen
- Early National America, 1789–1815 by Stanley Elkins and Eric McKitrick
- Jacksonian America, 1815–1846 by Charles Grier Sellers
- The Civil War by William W. Freehling
- Reconstruction and Industrial America by Morton Keller[a]
- Early Twentieth-Century America, 1900–1930 by William H. Harbaugh
- The New Deal, 1930–1945 by Ernest R. May
- The American Economy by Stuart Bruchey
- American Diplomacy by Norman A. Graebner
- The Intellectual History of the United States by John W. Ward
Ward left the project in 1971, and the series temporarily considered signing historian R. Jackson Wilson to replace Ward as author of an intellectual history volume before eventually dropping the volume sometime after the early 1980s.[7] Keller submitted his manuscript about the Reconstruction era in 1971, making him the first of the signed authors to do so; after multiple rounds of revisions, Woodward and Oxford University Press editor Sheldon Meyer rejected the manuscript on the grounds that it was insufficiently attendant to lay readers and too focused on politics.[13] Harvard University Press published Keller's manuscript in 1977 as Affairs of State: Public Life in Late Nineteenth-century America,[11] and the Oxford History contracted George M. Fredrickson to replace Keller.[14]
Freehling, signed to write about the Civil War, later withdrew from the series, replaced by Willie Lee Rose, a former graduate student of Woodward's.[14] She was the only woman either Hofstadter or Woodward ever invited to write for the series.[15] After Rose had a stroke in 1978, she was unable to continue the project, and James M. McPherson replaced her as the series' Civil War author.[16]
When asked for a progress report in 1979, Elkins and McKitrick did not have a complete manuscript, and they pitched covering their assigned period in more than one volume; in 1982, Woodward and Meyer replaced them with historian Gordon S. Wood as author of the volume covering 1789 to 1815.[17] Oxford University Press later published Elkins and McKitrick's manuscript, narrating United States history up to 1800, as the 1993 The Age of Federalism.[16]
The first volume published in the series, The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763–1789, written by Robert Middlekauff (who replaced Jensen in December 1970), was published in 1982.[18] Included on the rear dust jacket flap to the original hardcover edition was a projected outline for the series at that point:[19]
- Volume 1: Colonial America by T. H. Breen
- Volume 2: The Glorious Cause by Robert Middlekauff
- Volume 3: Early National America, 1789–1815 by Gordon S. Wood
- Volume 4: Jacksonian America, 1815–1846 by Charles Grier Sellers
- Volume 5: The Civil War by James M. McPherson
- Volume 6: Reconstruction and Industrial America by George M. Fredrickson
- Volume 7: Early 20th Century America, 1900–1930 by William H. Harbaugh
- Volume 8: The New Deal, 1930–1945 by David M. Kennedy
- Volume 9: Postwar America, 1945–1968 by William Leuchtenburg[b]
- Volume 10: The American Economy by Stuart Bruchey
- Volume 11: American Diplomacy by Norman A. Graebner
Concerned that his manuscript was amounting to a textbook, Breen left the series in 1985; Fredrickson left with similar concerns in 1987.[20] In 1988, the series published McPherson's volume on the Civil War period as Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era.[21] The year before, Sellers submitted to Woodward a partial draft of his Jacksonian America contribution; the draft's style and theoretical bend dissatisfied Woodward, who believed it would not appeal to a lay audience, and in 1990 he rejected the manuscript.[9] Oxford University Press published Sellers's manuscript outside the series as The Market Revolution: Jacksonian America, 1815–1846,[11] and the press contracted Daniel Walker Howe to replace Sellers's contribution.[22] Historian James T. Patterson replaced Leuchtenberg as author of the postwar history volume.[23] Bruchey submitted his manuscript about economic history, but Woodward decided not to publish it in the series.[7]
Two more volumes followed under Woodward's editorship. Grand Expectations: The United States, 1945–1974, by Patterson, was published in 1996, and Kennedy's Freedom From Fear: The American People in Depression and War, 1929–1945 was published in 1999.[24]
Kennedy editorship
[edit]External videos | |
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Panel discussion with David M. Kennedy, James McPherson, Robert Middlekauff, and James T. Patterson, September 20, 2005, C-SPAN |
After Woodward's death in 1999, David Kennedy assumed the editorship of the series.[25] Restless Giant: The United States from Watergate to Bush v. Gore, also written by Patterson, was published in 2005.[26] Oxford University Press' catalog for the spring of 2007 announced that a volume written by H. W. Brands, Leviathan: America Comes of Age, 1865–1900, would be published as part of the series. However, in December 2006 the Boston Globe reported that Leviathan was dropped from the series.[11] That same month, the Globe reported Howe and Herring had submitted book drafts (the latter for a thematic volume on diplomacy), Wood had submitted chapter drafts, historian Bruce Schulman had signed to write a volume on history from 1896 to 1929, and Fred Anderson and Andrew Cayton were writing the series' volume planned to cover 1672 to 1763.[11]
Howe's What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815–1848 joined the series' published volumes in 2007.[27] In 2008, the series published George C. Herring's From Colony to Superpower: U. S. Foreign Relations Since 1776[28] as its thematic volume on diplomatic history.[29] Wood's Empire of Liberty: A History of the Early Republic, 1789–1815 followed in 2009.[30] In 2017, the series published The Republic for Which It Stands: The United States During Reconstruction and the Gilded Age, 1865–1896, written by Richard White, as its volume covering Reconstruction and the Gilded Age.[31]
During Kennedy's tenure, the series republished some of its volumes in new editions. Freedom from Fear came out in paperback in 2001.[32] The Illustrated Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era was released in 2003 as another edition of McPherson's book, replacing the footnotes and a fifth of the original text with more maps, photographs, and period art, accompanied with captions by McPherson.[33] In 2005, the series published a revised edition of Middlekauff's The Glorious Cause that added more social history and a new epilogue and bibliographic essay.[34]
In 2011, it was reported that Schulman remained at work on his volume for the series covering 1896 to 1929.[35] In 2016, Schulman won the National Endowment for the Humanities' Public Scholar Award for this project.[36] As of 2011, Anderson and Cayton's Imperial America, 1672–1764 (then planned to be the series' second volume) remained a work in progress.[37] The book was unfinished when Cayton died in 2015.[38] Historian Peter C. Mancall was signed to write what was planned to be the chronologically first volume of the series, American Origins.[39]
Volumes
[edit]None of the volumes published in the series have been written by the authors originally commissioned at the series' first conception.[41]
Reception
[edit]For the most part, the publication of each volume has been greeted with laudatory reviews. Three of the volumes (McPherson's Battle Cry of Freedom, Kennedy's Freedom from Fear, and Howe's What Hath God Wrought) were awarded the Pulitzer Prize for History upon their publication.[42][43] Middlekauff's Glorious Cause and Wood's Empire of Liberty were finalists for the prize in 1982 and 2010, respectively.[44] Patterson's Grand Expectations also received the 1997 Bancroft Prize in American history,[45] and Kennedy's Freedom from Fear also received the 2000 Francis Parkman Prize.
When originally published in hardcover, McPherson's Battle Cry of Freedom spent 16 weeks on The New York Times Best Seller list, and an additional 3 months for the subsequent paperback edition.[46]
However, in the October 2006 issue of the Atlantic Monthly, the magazine's book editor, Benjamin Schwarz, criticized the volumes by Kennedy and Patterson in the Oxford History of the United States as "bloated and intellectually flabby" compared to the entries in the New Oxford History of England, maintaining that the volumes "lack the intellectual refinement, analytic sharpness, and stylistic verve" of their English counterparts.[1] Christopher Shea considered Schwarz's criticism "idiosyncratic".[47]
Notes
[edit]- ^ Before the series contracted Keller for this volume, Woodward had originally been tasked with writing it.[12]
- ^ A volume on postwar American history was not originally planned for the series but was added when it became, in historian James Cobb's words, "necessary to extend its chronology forward".[14]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Schwarz, Benjamin (October 2006). "The Path of Least Resistance". The Atlantic Monthly. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
- ^ Van Heyningen (1986, p. 298).
- ^ Muzzey, David S. (28 April 1928). "Through English Eyes". The Saturday Review of Literature. p. 819.
- ^ McPherson, James M. (September 2000). "The War that Never Goes Away". People & Mountains. West Virginia Humanities Council. Archived from the original on 9 May 2008. Retrieved 23 June 2015.
- ^ Phelps (2011, p. 432n2).
- ^ Cobb (2022, pp. 264, 364).
- ^ a b c O'Brien (2011, p. 428).
- ^ "History: It's Still About Stories". The New York Times. 19 September 1999. Retrieved 11 June 2013.
- ^ a b c Cobb (2022, p. 376).
- ^ Cobb (2022, p. 373).
- ^ a b c d e Shea, Christopher (24 December 2006). "The Rejection Bin of History". Critical Faculties. The Boston Globe. Archived from the original on 7 April 2022. Retrieved 14 April 2014.
- ^ a b Cobb (2022, p. 374).
- ^ Cobb (2022, p. 374); Phelps (2011, p. 432).
- ^ a b c Cobb (2022, p. 375).
- ^ O'Brien (2011, p. 429).
- ^ a b Phelps (2011, p. 432)
- ^ Cobb (2022, pp. 373–374).
- ^ McElya (2011, pp. 421–422); Cobb (2022, pp. 372–375).
- ^ Middlekauff (1982, rear dust jacket flap); Cobb (2022, p. 375).
- ^ Cobb (2022, pp. 379–380, 467n26).
- ^ Phelps (2011, p. 432).
- ^ Fox, Justin (7 February 2018). "It's Beginning to Look a Lot Like the Gilded Age". Opinion. Bloomberg (review). Archived from the original on 9 August 2020.
- ^ Cobb (2022, p. 375).
- ^ Burnard (2011, p. 407).
- ^ McPherson, James M. (19 September 1999). "History: It's Still About Stories". New York Times. Archived from the original on 17 July 2022. Retrieved 22 October 2022.
- ^ "Restless Giant: The United States from Watergate to Bush v. Gore". Publishers Weekly. 1 September 2005.
- ^ McElya (2011, p. 441).
- ^ Joffe, Josef (31 October 2008). "Entangling Alliances". New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
- ^ Phelps (2011, p. 432).
- ^ Phelps (2011, p. 433).
- ^ Aron (2018, p. 209).
- ^ Doenecke (2004, p. 24)
- ^ "The Illustrated Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era". Publishers Weekly. 1 October 2003.
- ^ Flatley (2005, p. 145).
- ^ "IU McNutt Lecture to Examine Success of Modern Conservatism". Targeted News Service. 13 March 2011 – via Gale Onefile: News.
- ^ Rimer, Sara (7 November 2016). "CAS Historian's View of American Politics, circa 2016". BU Today.
- ^ Talbott, Clint (6 January 2011). "A History not Viewing America as a Fait Accompli". Colorado Arts & Sciences Magazine. Archived from the original on 8 August 2017.
- ^ Hinderaker, Eric A. "Remembering Drew Cayton as a Scholar and Friend". Omohundro Institute of Early American History and Culture. Archived from the original on 8 August 2016.
- ^ "'Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, and the Lord of Misrule': A Book Talk with Peter C. Mancall". Monticello. Thomas Jefferson Foundation. Retrieved 6 April 2024.
- ^ Schulman, Bruce. "Curriculum Vitae: Bruce J. Schulman" (PDF). Retrieved 5 June 2021.
- ^ Schwarz, Benjamin (March 2005). "Editor's Choice: Clothes-minded". Books & Critics. The Atlantic. pp. 101–104.
- ^ Pulitzer Citation for "What Hath God Wrought"
- ^ Pulitzer Citation for "Freedom From Fear"
- ^ List of Pulitzer winners and nominees
- ^ "List of Bancroft Prize winners". Archived from the original on 14 July 2007. Retrieved 14 September 2010.
- ^ In Depth with James McPherson. C-SPAN (Videotape). National Cable Satellite Corporation. 4 March 2001. Retrieved 9 February 2015.
- ^ Shea, Christopher (24 December 2006). "The rejection bin of history". The Boston Globe. Retrieved 1 November 2018.
Sources
[edit]- Aron, Stephen (Summer 2018). "The Republic for Which It Stands: The United States during Reconstruction and the Gilded Age, 1865–1896. The Oxford History of the United States. By Richard White". Western Historical Quarterly. 49 (2): 209–210. doi:10.1093/whq/why015.
- Cobb, James C. (2022). C. Vann Woodward: America's Historian. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-1-4696-7021-8.
- Doenecke, Justus D. (November–December 2004). "Hoover to Hiroshima: So You Think American History from the Great Depression Through World War II Holds No Surprises? Read on". Books & Culture. Vol. 10, no. 6. pp. 24–26.
- Flatley, Robert (15 February 2005). "Middlekauff, Robert. The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763–1789". Library Journal. 130 (3): 145. ISSN 0363-0277.
- O'Brien, Michael (August 2011). "A Response to Trevor Burnard: The Standpoint of an Editor". Journal of American Studies. 45 (3): 426–430. doi:10.1017/S0021875811000508. hdl:11343/33008. JSTOR 23016780.
- McElya, Micki (August 2011). "A Response to Trevor Burnard: 'America the Good, America the Brave, America the Free'". Journal of American Studies. 45 (3): 421–425. doi:10.1017/S0021875811000508. hdl:11343/33008. JSTOR 23016779.
- Middlekauff, Robert (1982). The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763–1789. Oxford History of the United States (1st ed.). Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-502921-6.
- Phelps, Christopher (August 2011). "A Response to Trevor Burnard: American Past, America Present". Journal of American Studies. 45 (3): 431–436. doi:10.1017/S0021875811000508. hdl:11343/33008. JSTOR 23016781.
- Van Heyningen, E. B. (1986). "The Glorious Cause: The American Revolution, 1763–1789. By R. Middlekauff". Boekbesprekings/Book Reviews. South African Historical Journal. 18: 298–300. doi:10.1080/02582478608671616.
Further reading
[edit]- Burnard, Trevor (August 2011). "America the Good, America the Brave, America the Free: Reviewing the Oxford History of the United States". Journal of American Studies. 45 (3): 407–420. doi:10.1017/S0021875811000508. hdl:11343/33008. JSTOR 23016778.
- Burnard, Trevor (August 2011b). "A Response by Trevor Burnard". Journal of American Studies. 45 (3): 437–441. doi:10.1017/S0021875811000508. hdl:11343/33008. JSTOR 23016782.