Reviews
James Turner offers us a superbly crafted and absorbing biography of a seminal figure in nineteenth-century American culture. In this impressive book, Turner dusts off what might seem a stuffy subject to reveal a cultural adventure.
His book is a distinguished monument to its hero, and this monument may be more of a masterpiece than the original.
James Turner has provided, in The Liberal Education of Charles Eliot Norton, not only an excellent biography, but one of the best studies of the American mind in the nineteenth century.
James Turner's superb biography recovers the ubiquitous, orchestrating presence of Norton that irked William James and re-establishes the magnitude of his achievement. Turner's work deserves a wide readership.
James Turner presents a comprehensive, authoritative account of a nearly forgotten figure who almost single-handedly invented Western Civilization as an organizing principle for liberal arts education in the United States. Turner's study raises broader intellectual questions that fall beyond the proper score of a biographical study. Turner tells Norton's stories very much like the man himself would have.
By far the fullest account of Norton's life that we are likely to get for a long time to come. It is remarkable that Norton is so little known today, given such eminence. We can be all the more grateful, then, for James Turner's conscientious biography, which reminds us of Norton's many accomplishments and of the varied kind of life one person could lead during the 19th century.
An elegantly written, highly detailed biography of the life, times, and scholarly contributions of Charles Eliot Norton.
This important work offers the prospect of restoring Norton to his rightful position in American intellectual history.
Book Details
Preface
Acknowledgements
Prologue. The New England Clerisy
Chapter 1. Shady Hill, 1786-1842
Chapter 2. Cambridge and Boston, 1842-1851
Chapter 3. The World, 1849-1851
Chapter 4. A Merchant in the Unmaking
Preface
Acknowledgements
Prologue. The New England Clerisy
Chapter 1. Shady Hill, 1786-1842
Chapter 2. Cambridge and Boston, 1842-1851
Chapter 3. The World, 1849-1851
Chapter 4. A Merchant in the Unmaking, 1851-1855
Chapter 5. Adrift, 1855-1857
Chapter 6. A Literary Invalid, 1857-1861
Chapter 7. Toward "A Science of Ideal Politics," 1861-1865
Chapter 8. The North American, the Nation, and the Nation, 1865-1868
Chapter 9. Europe and Erudition, 1868-1872
Interlude
Chapter 10. Beginning Again
Chapter 11. Fresh Foundations of Learning, 1878-1882
Chapter 12. Olympus Ascended, 1882-1886
Chapter 13. Years that Bring the Philologic Mind, 1886-1891
Chapter 14. To Make Democracy Safe for the World, 1891-1895
Chapter 15. The Invention of Western Civilization, 1895-1898
Chapter 16. Shady Hill Again, 1898-1908
Illustrations
Notes
Sources Cited
The Published Writings of Charles Eliot Norton
Index