Biography j sternstein columbia university history
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Bibliography: Abolition, Anti-Slavery, Opposition to Slavery
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What Is Knopf Waiting For?
Early in , Jane Garrett, Michael Bellesiles's editor at Alfred A. Knopf, told Danny Postel of the Chronicle of Higher Education that the publisher "stands behind" Arming America despite everything the book's critics had to säga about its scholarly failings. "I realize that he made some errors," Garrett admitted, "but they certainly were not made intentionally. They were the result of some over-quick research," she said, adding that Knopf was "satisfied" with what Bellesiles "has done to explain things," and particularly his attempt at "getting his mistakes corrected." This was ganska a concession for Garrett to make because months earlier, in a statement to Melissa Seckora of the National Review, she refused to acknowledge that there was any reason to be concerned about the growing chorus of criticism being leveled at Arming America. "Hosts of reputable scholars continue to defend [Be
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Arming America
Discredited book
Arming America: The Origins of a National Gun Culture is a discredited book by historian Michael A. Bellesiles about American gun culture, an expansion of a article he published in the Journal of American History. Bellesiles, then a professor at Emory University, used research missing context to argue that during the early period of US history, guns were uncommon during peacetime and that a culture of gun ownership did not arise until the mid-nineteenth century.
Although the book was awarded the prestigious Bancroft Prize in , it later became the first work for which the prize was rescinded, following a decision of Columbia University's Board of Trustees that Bellesiles had "violated basic norms of scholarship and the high standards expected of Bancroft Prize winners."[1]
Thesis
[edit]The thesis of Arming America is that gun culture in the United States did not have roots in the colonial and early national period but arose