Chapter 5: A. Books and monographs, 1984.
Reference: 170.
Name: Bedini,
, Silvio A.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson and His Copying Machines
.
City: Charlottesville:
Publisher:
University Press of Virginia,
Date: 1984.
Pages: xvi, 239.
Notes: Thoroughly researched account of TJ's efforts to preserve copies
of his letters and papers,
first through use of
a copy press, later by means of the polygraph. Discussion focuses on the
latter device, including
its earlier versions,
and provides insight on TJ's relationship with Charles Willson Peale, the
manufacturer of his
polygraphs. Explains the
drawbacks and continuing problems with the device and illumines TJ's
efforts to encourage its
use by others. Although
copying machines might be considered one more minor
"gadget" in TJ's gallery of useful contrivances, the author's solid
scholarship is both entertaining
and finally suggestive
in several directions concerning TJ's production of writing.
Reference: 171.
Name: Flores,
, Dan L.
Publication: Jefferson and Southwestern Exploration: The Freeman
& Custis Accounts of
the Red River Expedition
of 1806 .
City: Norman:
Publisher:
University of Oklahoma
Press,
Date:
1984.
Pages: xx, 386.
Notes: The editor's introduction ( 3-90) describes fully TJ's interest in
exploring the southern
parts of the Louisiana
Purchase and his negotiations with William Dunbar and Thomas Freeman
to bring this about.
Discusses as well his
interest in natural history and his difficulty in finding competent naturalists
to record material in
this region. Informative
about responses of the Spanish authorities who defined the southern borders
of the Louisiana
territory rather differently
and were nervous about the activities of Aaron Burr. The author describes
the limited
geographical knowledge
concerning the head of the Red River and notes that the Americans
generally assumed it rose
somewhere near Santa Fe
and could open direct trade with that Spanish possession. Describes the
1806 expedition to
explore the Red River by
arranging in chronological order material from the journal and reports of
Freeman and Peter
Custis (the expedition's
naturalist). Thoroughly annotated; a major source for this aspect of TJ's
interest in the West.
Reference: 172.
Name: Greene,
, John C.
Publication: American Science in the Age of Jefferson
.
City: Ames,
Iowa:
Publisher: Iowa
State University Press,
Date: 1984.
Pages: xiv, 484.
Notes: Provides a comprehensive account of the state of scientific work
and thought in the early
republic and, in the
author's words,
"gives considerable prominence to the ideas and activities of Thomas
Jefferson, not
because he was a great
scientist, which he was not, but because he participated in one way or
another in nearly every
field of scientific inquiry,
stimulating his compatriots with his ideas and researches and inspiring them
with the knowledge
that their efforts were
appreciated at the highest level of government." Gives less focus on the
coherence at the
personal level of TJ's
scientific interests than does the earlier study of Edwin T. Martin
(3073) and less attention to the ideological context of the American
scientific world than Daniel
J. Boorstin (2144),
but easily surpasses each with its well-researched and detailed account of
American scientists
and their activities.
Fifteen chapters discuss major centers of scientific activity and then the
status of astronomy,
chemistry, geography,
geology, botany, zoology and paleontology, physical anthropology,
archaeology, and
comparative linguistics and the
problem of Indian origins.
Reference: 173.
Name: Jayne,
, Allen, ed.
Publication: The Religious and Moral Wisdom of Thomas Jefferson
.
City: New
York:
Publisher: Vantage Press,
Date:
1984.
Pages: xii,
219.
Notes: Extracts from TJ's writings without comment or notes.
Insignificant for scholarly
purposes.
Reference: 174. 174.
Name: Kane,
, Jeffrey.
Publication: In Fear of Freedom: Public Education and Democracy in
America .
City: New
York:
Publisher: Myrin Institute,
Date:
1984.
Pages:
47.
Notes: Contends that since 1826 America has abandoned TJ's
"faith in the individual's right and ability to enlighten himself," with
schools shifting first to
attempting to inculcate a
common moral viewpoint, then to instill essential values for citizenship in
a democracy. At the
same time, he argues,
schools have increasingly passed from the control of parents to "government
and educational
reformers." TJ's wall of
separation doctrine supposedly would bar a state role in education since
"education is primarily a
spiritual-intellectual
process" and thus falls on the church side of the wall. Claims public funds
should be available to
private schools and
state-imposed guidelines and mandates should be removed from public
schools. Dubious
propositions, reifications,
partial history, and faulty logic mar the argument here.
Reference: 175.
Name: Libiszowska,
, Zofia.
Publication: Tomasz Jefferson .
City: Wroclaw
[Poland]:
Publisher:
Zaklad Narodowy Imienia
Ossolinskich-wydawnictwo,
Date: 1984.
Pages: 305.
Notes: In Polish.
Reference: 176.
Name: Matthews,
, Richard K.
Publication: The Radical Politics of Thomas Jefferson: A Revisionist
View .
City: Lawrence:
Publisher: University Press of Kansas,
Date:
1984.
Pages: ix,
171.
Notes: Contends that TJ has been more misrepresented or
misunderstood than any other
founding father. Both conflict
historians such as Beard and consensus historians such as Hartz see him as
the prophet of a
liberal future, based in
Locke and exemplified by a triumphant capitalism. On the other hand
ideological historians such
as Bailyn and Pocock
by emphasizing the influence of the whig, republican tradition portray a TJ
defined by a nostalgic
desire for an Edenic
past. The picture of TJ is further clouded by a tendency among many
writers to confuse
Jefferson and "Jeffersonian" idea systems, and Matthews particularly
emphasizes the need to
disengage TJ from
Madison, who stands ideologically closer to Hamilton in his view. Looks
at TJ's notions of
property, human nature,
and personal ends in order to argue for a figure whose humanism,
communitarian anarchism, and
radical democracy
"stand as an alternative to the market liberalism of the past and present."
Uses insights from
Hannah Arendt and C. B.
Macpherson in order to contend that TJ "not only presents a radical critique
of American market
society but also
provides an image for ... a consciously made, legitimately democratic
future." Somewhat
overstates the case for TJ's
radicalism, but nonetheless a thoughtful monograph and a useful corrective
to the tendency to try
to normalize TJ as a
genial liberal.
Reference: 177.
Name: Pechatnov,
, Vladimir Olegovich.
Publication: Gamilton i Dzhefferson .
City:
Moskva:
Publisher:
Mezhdunarodnie
Otnosheniia,
Date: 1984.
Pages: 336.
Notes: Examines the lives of two political founders of the United States
and discusses their
impact on the emerging
political institutions of the bourgeois republic. In Russian.
Reference: 178.
Name: Rusinowa,
, Izabella.
Publication: Jefferson a Poczatki Amerykanskiego Systemu Partyjnego
(Lata
1790-1800) .
City:
Warszawa:
Publisher: Wydawnictwa Universytetu
Warszawskiego,
Date:
1984.
Pages:
271.
Notes: In Polish; summary in English. Argues for party formation out
of the rivalry between
provincial elites oriented
toward trade and industry on the one hand and agricultural (particularly
Southern) interests on
the other. Categorizes
TJ rather too easily as an agrarian republican and contends in too simplistic
and presentistic a
manner that the party
system and party mechanisms of today have essentially been in place since
the end of the
eighteenth century. Sees TJ
as an ideological and party leader, perhaps more than he actually was.
Argues that his goal in the
1790's was to create
a strong, well-organized permanent opposition; this work may have more
relevance to the Poland
of the 1980's than to
the United States of the 1790's. The comparison, although allowed to
remain merely implicit, is
interesting.
Reference: 179.
Name: Sanford,
, Charles B.
Publication: The Religious Life of Thomas Jefferson
.
City: Charlottesville:
Publisher:
University Press of Virginia,
Date: 1984.
Pages: 246.
Notes: Focuses on TJ's religious ideas, seeking to project a vision of
him as, in the terms of the
initial chapter, a
"religious person." Attempts to discover a TJ safe for a Christianity more
conventional than his
own, one in which belief
and faith are more important than reason and principle and in which TJ,
"when he was not being
unduly influenced by
his Enlightenment authors," recognized "higher concepts of God." Chapters
on TJ's Bibles are
written without benefit
of consulting Dickinson W. Adams's work and before the publication of the
Papers edition of Extracts from the Gospels ,
and they are consequently dated.
The fullest attempt to deal
with a significant theme in TJ's life and thought, sometimes suggestive but
ultimately
disappointing.
Reference: 180.
Name: Stewart,
, Alva W. and Susan J. Stewart.
Publication: Thomas Jefferson: His Architectural Contributions to
Monticello and the
University of
Virginia .
City: Monticello, IL:
Publisher: Vance
Bibliographies,
Date:
1984.
Pages: 12.
Notes: A checklist which is neither particularly well thought out nor
well presented. Not useful.
Reference: 181.
Name: Stimson,
, Shannon C.
Title: "Judgment and the Concept of Judicial Space:
Theoretical Foundations of American Jurisprudence."
Publication: Ph.D. dissertation. Harvard University,
Date: 1984.
Pages: 283.
Publication: DAI
Volume: 45
Date: (1985) ,
Pages: 3738-A.
Notes: Argues that differing court practices and essentially different
conceptions of sovereignty
and the nature of law
separate English and American conceptions of jurisprudence. Concerned
with particular and
differing conceptions of
reason and will, and of law and government, offered by John Adams, TJ,
and Alexander
Hamilton, political thinkers
whose writings contributed not only to the formulation of the Constitution
but also, unavoidably,
to later understandings
of it.
B. Essays and Book Chapters.
Reference: 182.
Name: Appleby,
, Joyce.
Title: "Jefferson: A Political Reappraisal."
Publication: Democracy
Volume: 3
Date: (Fall, 1984) ,
Pages: 139-45.
Notes: Claimed by right and left, TJ stands not so much for democracy
as for freedom
understood as liberation from
all social authority. He "wrote the last will and testament" for the founding
fathers, and his
bequests have generated
the conflicts among us, his heirs. Central for understanding TJ is his trust
in man to be able to
take care of himself, and
his distrust of authority generated the "paradox of a passionately committed
president working to
divest the presidency
of national relevance."
Reference: 183.
Name: Ashworth,
, John.
Title: "The Jeffersonians: Classical Republicans or Liberal Capitalists?"
Publication: Journal of American Studies
Volume: 18
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 425-35.
Notes: Review essay of Joyce Appleby's Capitalism and a New
Social Order (1984)
weighing its argument for
the liberal and capitalist orientation of the Jeffersonians against the views
of scholars such as
Lance Banning who
emphasize the debt they owe to classical republican ideology. Makes an
essential point often
overlooked in these efforts
at ideological definition, "We need to know how typical a Jeffersonian
Jefferson was." Finds
that over various issues
such as virtue, equality, commerce, and capitalism, the labels often do not
stick when applied so
as to discriminate
between (among) Jeffersonians and Federalists.
Reference: 184.
Name: Bedini,
, Silvio A.
Title: "The Scientific Instruments of the Lewis and Clark Expedition."
Publication: Great Plains Quarterly
Volume: 4
Date: (1984)
Pages: 54-69.
Notes: Informative account of the instruments used on the Lewis and
Clark expedition. TJ had
definite opinions about
the scientific data to be collected and the instruments to be used. He made
his library and
instruments available to Lewis
for his instruction in their use, and he consulted with numerous scientific
experts for advice on
the expedition's scientific
program. Lewis selected the actual instruments which are now dispersed
and lost. Discusses use
of various instruments.
Illustrated with photographs of similar period scientific instruments.
Reference: 185.
Name: Blau,
, Joseph L.
Title: "The Wall of Separation."
Publication: Union Seminary Quarterly Review
Volume: 38
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 263-88.
Notes: Examines how American opinion on church-state relations
shifted from Roger
Williams's tolerationist position
to TJ's advocacy of full religious freedom. TJ's position necessitates a
separation of church and
state, which should be
maintained against threats in our day.
Reference: 186.
Name: Bolick,
, Charles H.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson: A Great American's Life and Ideas."
Publication: G/C/T
Volume: 35
Date: (November/December, 1984) ,
Pages: 31-34.
Notes: Presents an instructional unit in which academically gifted
students analyze the
contributions of TJ to American
society. Suggests various instructional strategies such as a background
assignment, study
activities, discussion questions
based on a text, culminating activities, and differentiated activities. Lists
filmstrips and other
resources.
Reference: 187.
Name: Boller,
, Paul F.
, Jr.
Title: "1800--Republican Takeover: Jefferson's Revolution"
and "1804--Jefferson's
Landslide" in
Publication: Presidential Campaigns .
City: New
York:
Publisher:
Oxford University
Press,
Date: 1984.
Pages: 10-21.
Notes: Brief accounts, with anecdotes.
Reference: 188.
Name: Bryan,
, John M.
Title: "Robert Mills, Benjamin Henry Latrobe, Thomas Jefferson and
the South Carolina
Penitentiary Project, 1806-1808."
Publication: South Carolina Historical Magazine
Volume: 85
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 1-21.
Notes: Mills sought TJ's support for his plans for a proposed South
Carolina penitentiary. Focus
on Mills's plans
excludes any real discussion of relations with TJ. Peripheral.
Reference: 189.
Name: Crader,
, Diana C.
Title: "The Zooarchaeology of the Storehouse and the Dry Well at
Monticello."
Publication: American Antiquity
Volume: 49
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 542-58.
Notes: Discusses 1981 excavations on Mulberry Row, particularly the
fragments of animal
bones found outside the
doorway of a building used originally to store nail rod but later apparently
for human occupation
and the contents of
a dry well or deep cellar dug near the original kitchen yard. The first gives
some evidence of the
contents of the slaves
diet and the latter of that of the main house. Pig, cow, and sheep remains
were at both sites, but
the dry well had more
remains from younger animals and bones associated with meatier cuts such
as roasts. Bones at
the storehouse were more
fragmented, suggesting use of meat in stews, etc., and dry well bones were
more likely to show
burn marks suggesting
roasting or grilling. Pig remains were the most common type at each site,
but sheep remains
were considerably more
common in the dry well than at the storehouse site. Evidence also points to
the use of somewhat
older animals at the
storehouse site.
Reference: 190.
Name: Cunningham,
, Noble E.
Title: "Jeffersonian Democracy"
in
Publication: Encyclopedia of American Political History
,
ed. Jack P. Greene.
City: New York:
Publisher: Scribners,
Date: 1984.
Volume: Vol. II,
Pages:
672-79.
Notes: Discusses the broadening of the concept of republicanism to
embrace the principles of
democracy during the
course of TJ's lifetime. Argues that Jeffersonian democracy was no simple
set of objective
principles but an "operative
creed worked out in the political arena." As president TJ's refashioning of
presidential style set
the tone for Jeffersonian
democracy by reducing the ceremonial role of the presidency as initiated by
Washington and
continued by John Adams.
Notes TJ's substitution of a written message to Congress in place of the
annual address of his
predecessors, his
preference for small dinners over levees or formal receptions, and his
rejection of formal rules of
diplomatic etiquette,
all of which tended to open the possibilities of the republic to the ordinary
citizen.
Reference: 191.
Name: Cunningham,
, Noble E.
Title: "The Legacy of Julian Boyd."
Publication: South Atlantic Quarterly
Volume: 83
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 340-44.
Notes: Assesses Boyd's editorship of the first 20 volumes of
The Papers of Thomas Jefferson as a major contribution to
Jeffersonian scholarship. The
first 6 volumes set new
standards of accuracy and annotation for editing historical documents, but
in later volumes Boyd
in effect became the
victim of his own success. He tried to do too much himself, did not build
up a staff of associate
editors, and allowed
the extended editorial notes to expand greatly in length and scope. This
slowed the production of
volumes, with perhaps
dangerous consequences in a time of lessening governmental support for
such projects, but at
their best Boyd's notes
reveal new material and information resulting from his careful scholarship.
Reference: 192.
Name: DeGregorio,
, William A.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson"
in
Publication: The Complete Book of U. S. Presidents
.
City: New
York:
Publisher: Dembner
Books,
Date: 1984.
Pages: 36-53.
Notes: Sketch, covering the usual points about TJ's life and career;
nothing new.
Reference: 193.
Name: Druse,
, Ken.
Title: "Bringing Thomas Jefferson's Garden Back to Life."
Publication: House Beautiful
Volume: 126
Date: (February, 1984) ,
Pages: 82-85, 125-26.
Notes: Brief, illustrated account of the restoration of the Monticello
gardens and the grove.
Reference: 194.
Name: Ferguson,
, Robert A.
Title: "Mysterious Obligation: Jefferson's
Publication: Notes on the State of Virginia "
in
Publication: Law and Letters in American Culture .
City: Cambridge:
Publisher: Harvard
University Press,
Date: 1984.
Pages:
34-58.
Notes: Rejecting descriptions of
Notes as haphazard or unstructured, the author claims that TJ
asserted his control over
personal difficulties and
national uncertainties by submerging them in a developmental sense of
country. The legal
philosophy of the
Enlightenment from Grotius through Blackstone valued incremental
structures of knowledge
which gave TJ a structural
and discursive model. Grotius's insistence upon separating discussion of
instituted or positive
law from treatment of
natural law, accepted as a central premise in important works by Pufendorf
and Burlamaqui,
guided TJ's rearrangement
and restructuring of Marbois's original set of queries. Behind the division
between natural
phenomena and social events
lies a confidence in the power of natural law to provide a unifying context,
and, in turn, behind
this confidence in the
ordering power of law lurk TJ's profound anxieties which are the
"prevailing mood" of the text.
Claims that TJ more
than any other American in his generation insured "that a conception of
higher law would
dominate political discourse."
The best essay on the imaginative consequences of TJ's legal knowledge.
Reference: 195.
Name: Filippi,
, Mario.
Title: "Jefferson y la Expansion de los EEEU."
Publication: Historia y Vida [Spain].
Volume: 17
Date: (September, 1984) ,
Pages: 109-25.
Notes: Describes the westward development of the United States from
settlement of the first
English colonies. Portrays
TJ as a central figure in encouraging U.S. expansion into the territory it
now occupies. For a
popular audience.
Reference: 196.
Name: Fitch,
, James Marston.
Title: "The Lawn: America's Greatest Architectural Achievement."
Publication: American Heritage
Volume: 35
Date: (June/July, 1984) ,
Pages: 49-64.
Notes: Discusses TJ's architectural plans for the University of Virginia;
TJ viewed architecture
as both utilitarian and
as a civilizing force. Well-illustrated, including frontal photographs of each
of the ten pavilions.
Reference: 197.
Name: Anonymous
Title: "Funds Sought for Restoration of Jefferson's Country Retreat."
Publication: Architecture
Volume: 73
Date: (December, 1984) ,
Pages: 16.
Notes: Very brief account of Poplar Forest and the campaign by the
non-profit
Corporation for Jefferson's Poplar Forest
to restore it.
Reference: 198.
Name: Gilreath,
, James.
Title: "Sowerby Revirescent and Revised."
Publication: Papers of the Bibliographical Society of America
Volume: 78
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 219-32.
Notes: Review essay describes how E. Millicent Sowerby did her
Catalogue of the Library of Thomas Jefferson and notes the
impact on subsequent
scholarship about TJ. Its
reprinting presents again a major achievement, but also reminds us of its
faults: its confusing
organization of a
"cacophony of information," inconsistency of description, and inaccurate
descriptions which
sometimes even present
non-existent editions as their basis.
(In some cases, if she did not have access to an edition she would use a
nearly contemporary, but
different, edition as
a basis for describing what she had not seen.) Valuable as her work is,
individual entries need to
be treated with care.
Good on the background of Sowerby's project; a fuller treatment of the
problems is offered by
Douglas Wilson's 1984
essay, noted below.
Reference: 199.
Name: Ginsberg,
, Robert.
Title: "Suppose That Jefferson's Rough Draft of the Declaration Is a
Work of Political
Philosophy."
Publication: Eighteenth-Century Theory and Interpretation
Volume: 25
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 25-43.
Notes: Contends that the Rough Draft can be read as a work of
philosophic thinking that shows
how equality may be
the foundation of rights. The Rough Draft is a work in process, emerging
out of manuscript
notes towards the version
TJ shared with his fellow committee members and eventually becoming the
official version
accepted by Congress.
While the Rough Draft provides an egalitarian concept of revolution, of
polity, and of world
order, the egalitarianism
slips away in the last version of the draft as well as in the official version.
Suggestive passages,
uneven argument.
Reference: 200.
Name: Greene,
, Bert.
Title: "Jefferson the Great Gastronome."
Publication: Cuisine
Volume: 13
Date: (March, 1984) ,
Pages: 36-41, 64-72.
Notes: Informative account of TJ's interest in food, written for a
popular audience but well
researched. With recipes
adapted for modern kitchens.
Reference: 201.
Name: Hall,
, Timothy D.
Title: "Rutherford, Locke, and the Declaration."
Th.M.
thesis. Dallas Theological
Seminary, 1984.
Notes: Not seen.
Reference: 202.
Name: Hamowy,
, Ronald.
Title: "Declaration of Independence"
in
Publication: Encyclopedia of American Political History
,
ed. Jack P. Greene.
City: New York:
Publisher: Scribners,
Date: 1984.
Volume: Vol.I,
Pages: 455-65.
Notes: Reviews leading interpretations of the Declaration and contends
that TJ, strongly
influenced by Locke, wedded
the doctrine of natural rights to the notion of government founded on
consent of the people. But
if governmental
authority rests on the consent of the people, it is circumscribed, in TJ's
opinion, by the
inalienable rights of natural law.
Argues that a number of misinterpretations of the Declaration have arisen
from the
misconception that TJ understood
the rights he enumerated as impelling others to positive action rather than
as negatively
conceived restrictions on how
men might act toward one another. Informative and thought-provoking.
Reference: 203.
Name: Hatch,
, Peter.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson as Gardener."
Publication: Plants and Gardens. Brooklyn Botanic Garden Record
Volume: 39
Date: (March, 1984) ,
Pages: 3-7.
Notes: Reprint of article from Flower and Garden (1983),
described above.
Reference: 204.
Name: Healey,
, Robert M.
Title: "Jefferson on Judaism and the Jews: `Divided We Stand, United,
We Fall!'."
Publication: American Jewish History
Volume: 73
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 359-374.
Notes: An authoritative account organized under four headings: TJ's
politics concerning
religious minorities, his
personal relationships with individual Jews, his assessment of Judaism as
religious doctrine, and
his version of the
gospel accounts of Jesus. TJ throughout his life advocated religious freedom
for members of all
faiths, including the
Jews, but while he was ready to appoint Jews to public office, none were
included in his closest
circle of friends with
whom he felt free to discuss topics such as religion. In common with other
Enlightenment
rationalists, he thought
Judaism not significantly changed since the time of Moses and full of
corruptions and
meaningless ritual. He also
thought it was ethically deficient and practically ignored the existence of an
afterlife. He saw
Jesus as a moral teacher
who could have reformed the corruptions of Judaism, but he did not
recognize the extent to
which Jesus's reforms were
rooted in the Judaic prophetic tradition. He saw the death of Jesus as an
historical tragedy, but
because he did not accept
the concept of inherited guilt, he refused to blame Jews for "deicide." For
all these reasons he
welcomed the appearance
of Isaac Harby's 1826 discourse in favor of reformed Judaism.
Reference: 205.
Name: Healy,
, Diana Dixon.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson: The Leader of the Opposition"
in
Publication: America's Vice-Presidents .
City:
New York:
Publisher:
Atheneum,
Date: 1984.
Pages: 9-14.
Notes: Sketch; nothing new.
Reference: 206.
Name: Hickey,
, Donald R.
Title: "Timothy Pickering and the Haitian Slave Revolt: A Letter to
Thomas Jefferson."
Publication: Essex Institute Historical Collections
Volume: 120
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 149-163.
Notes: After 1801 TJ's administration reversed the tacitly pro-Haitian
policies of previous years,
and in 1806 Congress
voted to end all trade with Haiti. Pickering's letter (printed here) pled with
TJ to reject this
move, but it was a
predictably tactless and self-righteous performance that undercut his good
intentions. Focus on
Pickering, not TJ.
Reference: 207.
Name: Hook,
, Sidney.
Title: "Education in Defense of a Free Society."
Publication: Commentary
Volume: 78
Date: (July, 1984) ,
Pages: 17-22.
Notes: Sees the emphasis on self-government as the most profound
feature of TJ's political
philosophy. This means
a government based on freely given, uncoerced assent, recognition of the
right to dissent, and
observation of the
principle of majority rule. TJ's restraint on possible errors of the majority
is an educated
citizenry, although we seem
to have lost much of his faith in the people. Asks how we can devise an
educational system to
strengthen a self-governing society, and concludes that neither science nor
the humanities alone
are sufficient, although the humanities,
"primarily the disciplines of language and literature, history, art and
philosophy," should be
central to such an endeavor.
Contends that we need a National Endowment for Democracy at home to
encourage "honest
inquiry into the functioning
of a democratic community" as envisioned by TJ. The Jefferson lecture for
1984.
Reference: 208.
Name: Kalckhoff,
, Andreas.
Title: "`Liebergefährliche freiheit als sichere knechtschaft.'
Thomas Jefferson, der
präsident der USA 1801 bis
1809."
Publication: Damals: Das Geschictsmagazin
Volume: 16
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 922-42.
Notes: Biographical sketch covering the years from 1781 to 1826.
Conventional.
Reference: 209.
Name: Ketcham,
, Ralph.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson"
and "Jefferson, Franklin and the
Commonness of Virtue" in
Publication: Presidents Above Party: The First American Presidency,
1789-1829 .
City: Chapel
Hill:
Publisher: University of North Carolina Press,
Date:
1984.
Pages: 100-12, 167-87.
Notes: In the context of a larger argument that the first six presidents
of the U.S. shared the
traditional suspicion of
political parties, thinking of them as "faction," shows the forceful influence
of the Augustan Tory
opponents of Walpole,
particularly Pope, Swift, and Bolingbroke. Shows the overlap and the
differences between this
ideology and that of
Trenchard and Gordon and the "True Whigs," and is thus able to cut
through some of the debates
about whether TJ is
a proto-liberal, a Country Party thinker, or the last heir of civic humanism.
Makes particular
sense of TJ's response to
Bolingbroke, and the complex underpinnings of his notions of leadership in
a republic. Does not
propose any radical
new interpretations of the republican ideology which was widely shared in
the early republic, but
clarifies and makes
sense of competing explanations in an admirable way.
Reference: 210.
Name: Lecoat,
, Gerard.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and the Architecture of Immortality."
Publication: Laurels
Volume: 55
Date: (Spring 1984) ,
Pages: 41-54.
Notes: Compares French and American attitudes circa 1791 with
respect to great men and
memorializing them as
immortals, and contrasts TJ's "places of remembrance" with French ideas.
Americans praised
military men of action,
Roman virtue, a practice curiously consistent with the English aristocratic
ideal; French of the
revolutionary era were
suspicious of military adventurers and glorified philosophers, theorists, and
thinkers. Like the
Pantheon of Paris, "the
Rotunda is clearly dedicated to immortality. ... on the upper level of the
Rotunda, the Great
Architect, God of the
enlightened, witnesses a new offering [i.e. the library] made to Him, that
of collective memory
and history." The Roman
model and the Palladian heritage behind the Rotunda reinforced the notion
of the imago
mundi . TJ's design of
his own Burying Place shows that he looked beyond the Pantheon for
models of memorial
expression.
Reference: 211.
Name: McClaughey,
, John.
Title: "Let's Get Back to Tom Jefferson."
Publication: Conservative Digest
Volume: 10
Date: (April, 1984) ,
Pages: 16.
Notes: Individual liberty, sound money, decentralized government, and
America as a beacon to
the world.
Reference: 212.
Name: McLaughlin,
, William G.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and the Rise of Cherokee Nationalism,
1806-1809"
in
Publication: Cherokee Ghost Dance: Essays on the Southeastern
Indians
1789-1861 .
City: [Macon?]:
Publisher: Mercer University Press,
Date:
1984.
Pages: 73-110.
Notes: Reprints essay originally published in 1975, see
TJCAB # 1802.
Reference: 213.
Name: Miller,
, Jeremy M.
Title: "A Critique of the Reynolds Decision."
Publication: Western State University Law Review
Volume: 11
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 165-98.
Notes: Claims TJ's wall of separation was intended to protect free
exercise of religion from
harm and uses it to argue
that the Supreme Court erred in 1878 when it denied Reynolds's claim that
polygamy was
protected religious exercise
for a Mormon. Peripheral.
Reference: 214.
Name: Miller,
, Naomi.
Title: "A Thoroughly Rational Residence."
Publication: Times Literary Supplement .
Date: August 17, 1984.
Pages: 922.
Notes: Discusses TJ's construction of Monticello; a brief review essay
occasioned by William
H. Adams's
Jefferson's Monticello
(1983).
Reference: 215.
Name: Nelson,
, Robin.
Title: "Great Home Ideas from a Presidential Do-it-yourselfer."
Publication: Mechanix Illustrated
Volume: 80
Date: (July, 1984) ,
Pages: 35-37.
Notes: TJ's gadgets, with diagrams showing handypersons how the
French doors, collapsible
ladder, and serving door
worked.
Reference: 216.
Name: Noll,
, Mark.
Title: "When `Infidels' Run for Office."
Publication: Christianity Today
Volume: 28
Date: (October 5, 1984) ,
Pages: 20-25.
Notes: Examines the election of 1800 and the clerical attacks on TJ as
an example of
misdirected religious zeal, but
recognizes the legitimacy of a Christian involvement in public life.
Reference: 217.
Name: Poch,
, Robert.
Title: "Jefferson's Virginia Legacy:
An Architectural Influence in the Old Dominion."
Publication: Virginia Cavalcade
Volume: 34
Date: (no. 2, 1984) ,
Pages: 76-89.
Notes: Illustrated account of TJ's architectural interests and work.
Standard except for
brief discussions of
Edgemont, similar to Poplar Forest, and Barboursville and the wing at
Farmington which show
resemblances to
Monticello.
Reference: 218.
Name: Quinby,
, Rowena Lee.
Title: "The Moral-Aesthetic Essay in America."
Publication: Ph.D. dissertation. Purdue University,
Date: 1984.
Pages: 275.
Publication: DAI
Volume: 45
Date: (1984),
Pages: 2529-A.
Notes: Defines the moral-aesthetic essay as a work with an overt
incitement to moral action and
an explicit focus on
the relations between beauty, art, and morality; morality and aesthetics
become mutually
constitutive. Includes a
discussion of TJ's writings leading to the claim that they provide a grammar
of Moral-Aesthetic
discourse. Also
discusses Edwards, Margaret Fuller, Thoreau, Henry Adams, and James
Agee. See essay by
same author in 1982, noted
above.
Reference: 219.
Name: Reeb,
, Richard H., Jr.
Title: "Through a Text Faintly: The Declaration of Independence as
Seen by Current Political
Science."
Publication: Journal of the Association for the Improvement of
Community College
Teaching
Volume: 1
Date: (Spring-Summer, 1984) ,
Pages: 57-63.
Notes: The Declaration is not generally taken very seriously by the
authors of college textbooks
in American
government, and the author thinks this cuts students off from the
revolutionary roots of their
republican regime and
undercuts the legitimacy of all movements for equality, liberty, and
government by consent of
the governed. Examines
treatments given to the Declaration by leading textbooks which range from
those which give it an
early significant
mention but then drop it for the rest of the book to those seek to diminish
both its status and its
principles, arguing that
TJ as a slaveholder never had any intention of putting equality and liberty
into practice in the
United States. Students
taught by such books too easily come to the conclusion that the U.S. is
based "on convenient and
useful fictions or
myths" which are "a matter of ultimate indifference to the social scientist."
Reference: 220.
Name: Richardson,
, Robert D. , Jr.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826).
Publication: Dictionary of Literary Biography ,
Volume: vol. 31,
Publication: American Colonial Writers, 1735-1781
,
ed. Emory Elliott.
City: Detroit:
Publisher: Gale Research
Company,
Date: 1984.
Pages: 136-49.
Notes: Biographical essay which is particularly attentive to TJ's literary
activities. Offers a
balanced and thorough
view, but emphasizes more than many accounts TJ's involvement with
skeptical traditions of
thought and circles of
skeptical thinkers. Contends that "On balance, the Notes on the State
of Virginia is
the most remarkable
book of its kind between Bradford's Of Plimmoth Plantation
and Thoreau's
Walden ."
Reference: 221.
Name: Richardson,
, William D.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson & Race: The Declaration and
Notes on the State of Virginia."
Publication: Polity
Volume: 16
Date: (1984) .
Pages: 447-66.
Notes: Argues that TJ believed that blacks were equal to all other men
in terms of rights but that
he did not hold that
they should necessarily be enabled to become equal partners in the same
polity with whites.
Points to the Rough Draft
of the Declaration where slaves are pointedly referred to as MEN (TJ's
caps) and to
Notes where the claims of the moral equality of blacks and
whites are posited against
discussion of physical
differences, primarily color, which raise political arguments against a
political community
containing both blacks and
whites.
Reference: 222.
Name: Scharnhorst,
, Gary.
Title: "The Virginian as Founding Father."
Publication: Arizona Quarterly
Volume: 40
Date: (1984) .
Pages: 227-41.
Notes: Contends that the title character of Owen Wister's
The Virginian is based on the figures of George Washington
and TJ. Describes the
Virginian as "Jefferson in
chaps and spurs" for his belief in natural rights, in agrarianism, and in
egalitarianism. Supports
the argument with
discussion of Wister's avowed interest in and knowledge of both TJ and
Washington.
Reference: 223.
Name: Shawen,
, Neil McDowell.
Title: "Thomas Jefferson and a `National' University: The Hidden
Agenda for Virginia."
Publication: Virginia Magazine of History and Biography
Volume: 92
Date: (1984) ,
Pages: 309-35.
Notes: Examines TJ's support or lack of it for various educational
proposals and contends that
he was only temporarily
attracted to the concept of a national university and then only when it
served other, private
purposes. Claims that
following his failure to reform William and Mary, TJ had a consistent
hidden agenda to erect a
first rate university in
central Virginia, preferably close to Charlottesville. Because of its location,
among other
reasons, he was lukewarm
at best in support of Quesnay's proposed school at Richmond but he was
willing to try to
persuade Washington to
support a national university in the capitol if it would make possible the
transplantation of the
University of Geneva.
He was not enthusiastic about later proposals for a national university such
as Du Pont's or Joel
Barlow's.
Reference: 224.
Name: Shklar,
, Judith N.
Title: "The Renaissance American: Thomas Jefferson's Dreams and
Disappointments."
Publication: New Republic
Volume: 191
Date: (November 5, 1984) ,
Pages: 29-35.
Notes: Analyzes TJ's character in terms of his epitaph. His stands
against intolerance,
ignorance, persecution,
despotism and the suffering they bring should still matter to us. But his
indifference to or
ignorance of the uneducated,
the enslaved, or the racial other we cannot accept. Yet, he is an icon as
"the man who put human
rights on the map
forever."
Reference: 225.
Name: Simpson,
, Lewis P.
Title: "The Ferocity of Self: History and Consciousness in Southern
Literature."
Publication: South Central Review
Volume: 1
Date: (Spring-Summer, 1984) . 67-84.
Notes: Contends that "the essential motive of southern writers" has
been their explicit or
implicit recognition of their
relationship to an Old South that was centered on the self rather than on
family. Discusses Allen
Tate's attempt to
dissociate TJ from the southern tradition and Robert Penn Warren's more
perceptive
understanding of TJ's vision of the
slave society of the South as a culture of the self. Centers on a
consideration of TJ's "great poetic
statement about self
and slavery" in Query XVII of Notes . Claims that TJ's
analysis of the master-slave
relationship in Notes
anticipates the analysis in Hegel's Phenomenology of Mind
(1807). TJ seems to suggest that the rational, secular, historical self can
only realize its will
through violence, and he
perhaps recognizes that the slave is both an other and opposing self even as
he is yet part of the
master's self. Thus "the
eighteenth Query ... is an ominous gloss on the Declaration of
Independence" which calls into
question the very
possibility of the self as an independent entity. TJ as a proto-Hegelian might
be a reach, but a
stimulating, suggestive
argument.
Reference: 226.
Name: Skillen,
, James W.
Title: "The Republican Vision of Thomas Jefferson"
in
Publication: America, Christian or Secular ,
ed. Jerry S. Herbert.
City: Portland,
Oregon:
Publisher: Multnomah Press,
Date: 1984.
Pages: 147-65.
Notes: Describes TJ's beliefs as a rationalist monism, " a single
philosophy of personal life and
politics as an integral
religious totality," whereas genuinely Christian groups retained a dualistic
perspective: their own
particular religious
perspective for their private lives and a TJ-style rationalism for their public
lives.
Denominationalism with its
identification of religion with diverse groups supported TJ's moral
philosophy as an
all-embracing secular political
instrument.
Reference: 227.
Name: Swindler,
, William F.
Title: "Seditious Aliens and Native Seditionists."
Publication: Yearbook 1984. Supreme Court Historical Society
.
Date: 1984.
Pages: 12-19.
Notes: Account of the Alien and Sedition Law prosecutions and TJ's
protest in the form of the
Kentucky Resolutions.
Nothing particularly new.
Reference: 228.
Name: Tucker,
, David.
Title: "Jefferson and the Practice of Empire"
in
Publication: Natural Right and Political Right: Essays in Honor of
Harry V.
Jaffa ,
ed. Thomas B. Silver
and Peter W. Schramm.
City: Durham NC:
Publisher: Carolina Academic Press,
Date: 1984.
Pages: 27-43.
Notes: TJ's vision for a post-war U.S. aimed at happiness and good
government within a context
of national security.
Portrays intrigues and maneuvers of British and French which threatened
that security; TJ's
carefully thought-out vision
of an American empire was an act of national self-preservation. Ordinary.
Reference: 229.
Name: Wamsley,
, James S.
Title: "At Home with Tom Jefferson."
Publication: Reader's Digest
Volume: 125
Date: (August, 1984) ,
Pages: 161-62.
Notes: Condensation of the next item.
Reference: 230.
Name: Wamsley,
, James S.
Title: "Digging for Jefferson."
Publication: GEO
Volume: 6
Date: (April, 1984) ,
Pages: 82-91, 122.
Notes: TJ's life at Monticello and the archaeological efforts going on
under the direction of
William Kelso to recover
it. Illustrated.
Reference: 231.
Name: Weatherman,
, Donald V.
Title: "Civic Education: A Dying Art?"
Publication: Improving College and University Teaching
Volume: 32
Date: (Winter, 1984) ,
Pages: 31-34.
Notes: A successful civic education program educates citizens in the
basic principles and
precepts of the American
political system and keeps them informed on specific issues and
controversies. Both TJ and
Lincoln thought that civic
education should address basic principles as well as specific issues.
Reprinted in
Publication: Social Studies
Volume: 75
Date: (May-June,
1984) ,
Pages: 129-32.
Reference: 232.
Name: Williams,
, Richard L.
Title: "Atop a `little mountain' in Virginia, Jefferson cultivated his
botanical bent."
Publication: Smithsonian
Volume: 15
Date: (July 1984) .
Pages: 68-77.
Notes: Describes the variety of TJ's gardening interests and the
continuing work of the staff of
the Thomas Jefferson
Memorial Foundation to restore the grounds of Monticello.
Reference: 233.
Name: Wilson,
, Douglas L.
Title: "Sowerby Revisited: The Unfinished Catalogue of Thomas
Jefferson's Library."
Publication: William and Mary Quarterly
Volume: 41
Date: (1984) .
Pages: 615-28.
Notes: Review essay occasioned by the reprinted edition of Sowerby's
Catalogue of the Library of Thomas Jefferson . Gives full
credit to the magnitude and
usefulness of Sowerby's
work but discusses some problems and limitations pertaining to it, not all
of them her
responsibility. The author notes
that not all of the books TJ is known to have possessed are included and
that the treatment of the
1783 manuscript
catalogue of the library is "unfortunate," particularly in regard to the effort
to reestablish TJ's
original arrangement of
books within the chapters of the 1815 catalogue. Important essay for anyone
using the Sowerby
Catalogue