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Details

Autor(en) / Beteiligte
Titel
Proverbs are the Best Policy
Ort / Verlag
Utah State University, University Libraries
Erscheinungsjahr
2005
Link zum Volltext
Beschreibungen/Notizen
  • Open Access
  • Widely considered the worlds greatest living proverb scholar and known as the author of, among numerous other books, the Encyclopedia of World Proverbs and the coeditor of A Dictionary of American Proverbs, Wolfgang Mieder has brought particular attention and understanding to the uses of proverbs in politics. In this new collection of eight essays, he considers the role of proverbial speech in the American political scene from the Revolutionary War to the present.Mieder introduces this survey with an examination of what characterizes American proverbs, what are their origins, and how they have spread internationally with the expansion of Americas political role. He then turns to the origins and varied historical uses of what has become the defining proverb of American democracy, government of the people, by the people, for the people.-
  • The employment of proverbs had no brighter exponent among the nations founding generation than Abigail Adams, who was not without influence despite the exclusion from political office of women. As they have for so much, her abundant letters provide rich sources for politically charged proverbs.Though it is especially associated with Abraham Lincoln, a house divided against itself cannot stand is a biblical proverb that has proven of wide value as a political expression. Frederick Douglasss proverbial prowess paralleled that of his contemporary Lincoln, and he employed it effectively in his battle for civil rights. Given proverbs enduring role in American politics, it is an interesting exercise to compare how United States presidents have employed them in their inaugural addresses, which have produced such gems as John F. Kennedys ask not dictum.-
  • The bonds Franklin Roosevelt and Winston Churchill formed through the World War II alliance were expressed in the proverbial language that frequently enlivened their correspondence. Having addressed these aspects of the proverb in American politics, Mieder winds up by considering the sociopolitical significance of the ambiguous proverb good fences make good neighbors
Sprache
Identifikatoren
ISBN: 9780874216226
Titel-ID: 990228960290206441
Format
1 electronic resource ( p.)
Schlagworte
United States