please join us. . .          October 22, 2016 

When

Saturday October 22, 2016 from 6:00 PM to 7:30 PM EDT
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Where

Jay Heritage Center
210 Boston Post Road
Rye, NY 10580


 
Driving Directions

Contact

Suzanne Clary, Jay Heritage Center
914-698-9275
jayheritagecenter@gmail.com

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"Most Blessed of the Patriarchs"

Thomas Jefferson

and the Empire of the Imagination

by Annette Gordon-Reed and Peter S. Onuf

"  

 

6pm Lecture in the 1907 Van Norden Carriage House

7pm Reception and Book Signing

A groundbreaking work of history that explores Thomas Jefferson’s vision of himself, the American Revolution, Christianity, slavery, and race.

Thomas Jefferson is often portrayed as a hopelessly enigmatic figure—a riddle—a man so riven with contradictions that he is almost impossible to know. Lauded as the most articulate voice of American freedom and equality, even as he held people—including his own family—in bondage, Jefferson is variably described as a hypocrite, an atheist, or a simple-minded proponent of limited government who expected all Americans to be farmers forever.

Now, Annette Gordon-Reed teams up with America's leading Jefferson scholar, Peter S. Onuf, to present an absorbing and revealing character study that dispels the many clichés that have accrued over the years about our third president. Challenging the widely prevalent belief that Jefferson remains so opaque as to be unknowable, the authors—through their careful analysis, painstaking research, and vivid prose—create a portrait of Jefferson, as he might have painted himself, one "comprised of equal parts sun and shadow" (Jane Kamensky).

Tracing Jefferson's philosophical development from youth to old age, the authors explore what they call the "empire" of Jefferson's imagination—an expansive state of mind born of his origins in a slave society, his intellectual influences, and the vaulting ambition that propelled him into public life as a modern avatar of the Enlightenment who, at the same time, likened himself to a figure of old—"the most blessed of the patriarchs." Indeed, Jefferson saw himself as a "patriarch," not just to his country and mountain-like home at Monticello but also to his family, the white half that he loved so publicly, as well as to the black side that he claimed to love, a contradiction of extraordinary historical magnitude.

 

 

Annette Gordon-Reed is the Carol K. Pforzheimer Professor at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study, the Charles Warren Professor of American Legal History at Harvard Law School, and a Professor of History at Harvard University. Ms. Gordon-Reed received the 2008 National Book Award and the 2009 Pulitzer Prize in History for The Hemingses of Monticello: An American Family (2009). She is also the author of Thomas Jefferson and Sally Hemings: An American Controversy (1998) and Andrew Johnson (2011).

Peter S. Onuf  is the Thomas Jefferson Foundation professor of history at the University of Virginia and a senior research fellow at the International Center for Jefferson Studies (Monticello). 
His earlier work on Jefferson includes Jefferson’s Empire: The Language of American Nationhood (2001) and The Mind of Thomas Jefferson (2007). He was Harmsworth Professor at the University of Oxford from 2008-2009. He is co-host of public radio’s BackStory with the American History Guys and was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2014.