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Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America

Albion's Seed: Four British Folkways in America

List Price: $27.50
Your Price: $17.32
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 5 stars
Summary: An amazing account
Review: For those among us who want to understand America and American culture, look no further. This book is phenominal. This is a profound experience of a book. Personally, I read this book and sensed a true and honest American culture. The four folkways each contributing its influence to American culture, have made this country what it is: A land of freedom and human progress that is possible from that freedom. True, the British transcontinental experiment was founded by people seeking religious freedom, but the essence is that each wanted freedom in its purest sense (The individual sections on "Liberty" are excellent). I am incredibly thankful to Professor Fischer for having an organic perspective to history, he has put together a truly perfect cultural account. Amazing!

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Powerful Work
Review: Fischer uses the sociological concept of "Folkways" to organize his exploration of the cultures which created the United States. Folkways are the "ways of life" that combine to create a distinct cultures. In turn, those distinct cultures combine to create our society.

Fischer identifies four relevant folkways: the Puritans of New England, the Cavaliers of Virginia, the Quakers of the Delaware Valley and the Borderers (or Scotch Irish) of the back country.

The most extraordinary part of this long, long book was the manner in which Fischer was able to unpack the regional cultures of the British Isles. As Fischer himself remarks, British historians and social scientists have devoted negligible time and attention to regional culture (as supposed to strictly "local" culture, which is often covered in Britain).

Once Fischer links up the regions in England with their counter parts in America, the once obscure has become obvious. This, I believe, is one of the hallmarks of excellent scholarship.

It's almost impossible to critize anything about this book until the last hundred pages, when Fischer blithely asserts that all events for the past three hundred years are eminently explainable in terms of the four folkways of this book.

I was suprised to see him reach so far, especially since this is "volume 1" of a "proposed five volume set". Since this book was published fifteen years ago, I guess we'll have to be patient while we wait for, "The Ebony Tree: African Folkways in America"
, volume two of the set.

Still, this book was near revelatory in both method and analysis.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: A Most Excellent Book
Review: For those who want to know more about the how the United States developed its cultural, social, and political identity this is the book for you. This in turn leads me focus my recommendation to the two types of readers who will find this book most helpful/useful.

The two types of readers who will benefit/enjoy this book most are those who have a strong interest in the American Social Systems (Sociology/History Majors), followed by those interested how the those early societial values continue to influence American Politics/Values to this day (Politial Science/Religious Studies/Antropology Majors).

The information within this book is so important and yet alas not seen as important by the multitude as other simplistic books such as Laura Ingrams "shut up and sing" or Michael Moore's epic doorstop "dude where's my country"


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