Thomas Jefferson:
Draftsman of a Nation |
| |
| Natalie S. Bober |
| 352 pages, 6 x 9 |
| 48 b&w illustrations, 2 maps |
| cloth 978-0-8139-2632-2 $22.95 |
| paper 978-0-8139-2732-9 $14.95 |
| Paperback available April 2008 |
 |
Thomas Jefferson's was one of history's greatest voices for the
importance of individual freedom. His eloquence on this fundamental
right became the cornerstone of our nation and a central theme
of the Enlightenment. And yet, Jefferson presided over a society
that depended on slavery and was himself the holder of numerous
slaves. How are students of history to reconcile this contradiction
in the third president? Now celebrated biographer and historian
Natalie Bober presents a life of Jefferson that does not evade
this difficult question. Bober explores the slave community that
built and maintained his home, Monticelloand what their
lives under Jefferson tell us about him and about slavery as an
early American institution.
To assess fully what Jefferson might mean to our time, we must first understand
what it meant to be a man of his own time. From the first page,
the world he inhabited is made vividand so, too, is Jefferson
himself, standing before us as a freckled and, for the eighteenth
century, unusually tall young man. Bober follows him through a
life in which the presidency was just one of many accomplishment.
As designer of Monticello, he was one of the great architects
of his era; as founder of the University of Virginia, he was one
of the nation’s early champions of higher education. His greatest
legacy is perhaps as author of the Declaration of Independence,
a nearly unrivaled instance of words giving tangible meaning to
life. The Jefferson revealed here is distinguished by his often
contradictory nature but also by his optimism, his curiosity,
his exceptional sense of history (including the history still
to be made).
While primarily aimed at young readers, the book is a substantial
work of scholarship, based on several years research of primary-source
materials (including black oral history) and the most current
writings, and like Bober's earlier works should attract students
of history of all ages. This book faces the fact that Jefferson
was a flawed human beingand insists that this does not disqualify
him as a hero.
Natalie S. Bober is the author of numerous
books of history for young readers, including Countdown to
Independence: A Revolution of Ideas in England and Her American
Colonies 1760-1776
and Abigail Adams: Witness to a Revolution.