The Presidency of Theodore Roosevelt
Lewis L. Gould
The Presidency of Theodore Roosevelt
Lewis L. Gould
Theodore Roosevelt was hearty, frank, friendly, and bold - a president so popular that many Americans believed they knew him personally. Through the force of his personality and excitement of his adventuring, he wove the presidency into the fabric of daily life as no other president had done. Nearly a century later he is remembered as the most colourful chief executive. The author uses primary sources and recent scholarship to capture the excitement and controversy of Roosevelt’s White House years. Theodore Roosevelt was the first to personalize the modern presidency, he argues. He then used his popular appeal to address a number of fundamental, controversial questions: What is the proper role of government in regulating the economy? What is the best relationship between government and the business community? To what extent should the nation pursue a policy of social justice? What are the responsibilities that accompany world power? The author examines the successes and failures of Roosevelt’s administration and analyzes Roosevelt’s influence on national politics.|First published in 1991, The Presidency of Theodore Roosevelt has won acclaim as a lucid and thorough narrative of Roosevelt’s two terms in the White House. Reviewers praised the depth of Lewis L. Gould’s research, his comprehensive coverage of major aspects of Roosevelt’s tenure, and the persuasiveness of his conclusions about his subject’s personalized presidency. Writing in Reviews in American History, Willard Gatewood called the book essential reading for all who wish to understand the complex, charismatic, and perennially fascinating political figure that was Theodore Roosevelt. Long considered the standard work on its subject, Gould’s book is a trusted source that newcomers to Roosevelt’s years in the White House and experts in the field could consult with confidence in its research and historical judgments. It has also become an essential adoption for courses on the era, effectively engaging undergraduates and graduate students who have praised the author for his clarity and evenhandedness. Responding to frequent suggestions that the book be brought up-to-date to incorporate the excellent studies of Roosevelt’s presidency that have appeared since 1991, Gould has provided a new edition that he believes will reintroduce a new generation of readers to the fun and importance of an ebullient, lively chief executive. In this revised and expanded edition, Gould has built on the sterling qualities of the first edition and added new information and analysis based on continuing research and a command of the literature on Theodore Roosevelt’s presidency published during the last two decades. He has tightened the prose and added numerous references to the latest scholarship on this most engaging of presidents. Interested readers will find new discussions of the origins of Roosevelt’s creation of the Tongass Forest in Alaska, his treatment of a dissenting federal employee named Rebecca Taylor who took her grievance to the Supreme Court, the recent controversy over Roosevelt’s relationship with Japan, the dispute over whether the president issued a warning to Germany about Venezuela in 1902-1903, and the important role of a little-known conservative senator named Winthrop Murray Crane. With these and other changes, the updated version of Gould’s text provides an even more compelling narrative that broadens the already fascinating story of Roosevelt in power with new insights and perceptive conclusions.
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