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John Stauffer Interview: Uncovering Abraham Lincoln's Leadership Secrets 

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John Stauffer explains how Abraham Lincoln’s “rough and tumble” upbringing coupled with his passion and understanding of literature helped him to become an effective leader. Stauffer discusses contradictions in the Constitution, the emergence of the Republican Party in 1854, and he describes the Dred Scott decision in 1857 as "the most outrageous Supreme Court decision in American history."
John Stauffer is a leading authority on antislavery, the Civil War era, social protest movements and photography. He received his PhD from Yale in 1999 and won the Ralph Henry Gabriel Prize for the best dissertation in American Studies. He began teaching at Harvard that year and was tenured in 2004. He teaches courses on protest literature, Emancipation, southern literature, Douglass and Lincoln, the Civil War, autobiography, the nineteenth-century novel and historical fiction. He has received two teaching awards from Harvard: the Everett Mendelsohn Excellence in Mentoring Award and the Jan Thaddeus Teaching Prize and served as Chair of American Studies at Harvard from 2006-2012. Stauffer’s 19 books include The Black Hearts of Men: Radical Abolitionists and the Transformation of Race (2002); Giants: The Parallel Lives of Frederick Douglass and Abraham Lincoln (2008); and The Battle Hymn of the Republic: A Biography of the Song That Marches On (2013). Two of his books were national bestsellers and several have won numerous awards. He is the author of more than 50 academic articles and his essays have appeared in Time, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, the New Republic, and the Washington Post. He has been a consultant for feature films including Django Unchained (2012) and the Free State of Jones (2016).
The Apple TV+ series "Lincoln's Dilemma," features insights from journalists, educators and scholars, as well as rare archival materials, that offer a more nuanced look into the life of the Great Emancipator. Set against the background of the Civil War, "Lincoln's Dilemma" also gives voice to the narratives of enslaved people, shaping a more complete view of an America divided over issues including economy, race and humanity, and underscoring Lincoln's battle to save the country, no matter the cost. The series is narrated by award-winning actor Jeffrey Wright ("Angels in America") and features the voices of actor Bill Camp ("The Night Of") as Lincoln and Leslie Odom Jr. ("Hamilton") as Frederick Douglas.
To view the entire series please visit:
tv.apple.com/us/show/lincolns...
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John Stauffer, Historian, Harvard University
Interview Date: November 10, 2020
Interviewed by: Jackie Olive and Barak Goodman
© Apple Video Programming, LLC. All Rights Reserved.
#JohnStauffer #kunhardtfilmfoundation

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10 июл 2022

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Комментарии : 12   
@jecasey2
@jecasey2 Год назад
Exceptionally clear presentation of the political and social consequences of slavery in the 19th century. One of the very best.
@DA-bp8lf
@DA-bp8lf 4 месяца назад
Ya, if he could get all the facts and myths separated.
@rodgerasai
@rodgerasai Год назад
Another great one - Thank you !
@tommac5411
@tommac5411 Год назад
The one of very best productions. IMO
@luarchitect-iu2hq
@luarchitect-iu2hq 5 месяцев назад
Outstanding. So informative and so relevant to today.
@oi88113
@oi88113 5 месяцев назад
🤟🤟🏿🤟🏾🤟🏽🤟🏼🤟🏻🤟
@DA-bp8lf
@DA-bp8lf 4 месяца назад
Stephen Douglass was 5 feet 4 inches tall. Not sure where you got 6 feet 1 inch??
@haitianfella84
@haitianfella84 Месяц назад
He's referring to Frederick Douglas
@ttacking_you
@ttacking_you Год назад
Wait, so the north was extremely racist,the Midwest was extremely racist and unquestionably the south was EXTREMELY racist... ?This is most unflattering . It must be 100% true
@timothymeehan181
@timothymeehan181 11 месяцев назад
So….er…um…what’s your point here? Yeah, pretty much all white people were racists then, “white supremacists”, actually, believing in the superiority of the white race over others(blacks, Asians, Indians, etc), and they believed that it was based in/on “science”(as well as their own perceptions & experiences). And THAT was Lincoln’s political genius, and greatest accomplishment- how get a group of male white supremacists(the voters) in the North to join him in stopping, firstly, the spread of it, then fight a war to preserve the Union and defeat “the slave power”, and THEN agree to the Emancipation Proclamation and THEN the 13th Amendment ending slavery permanently? “The task he undertook was numbering sands and draining oceans dry…”. 🙏🇱🇷🎩
@luarchitect-iu2hq
@luarchitect-iu2hq 5 месяцев назад
The paradox of the US --they were also full of many, many anti-racists such as pastors, writers, underground railroad helpers, etc.
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