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E-grāmata: Presidential Character: Predicting Performance in the White House, With a Revised and Updated Foreword by George C. Edwards III

3.82/5 (97 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formāts: 548 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Oct-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000727449
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  • Formāts: 548 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 17-Oct-2019
  • Izdevniecība: Routledge
  • Valoda: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781000727449
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A book entitled The Presidential Character is more timely and necessary than ever. This new issue of James David Barber’s classic work appears almost 50 years after its first publication and yet reads like a roadmap to the 2020 presidential election. Its subtitle, “Predicting Performance in the White House,” is an apt reflection on the election of 2016.

With a revised and updated foreword by George C. Edwards III that brings in the Trump Administration, this book argues that patterns in a person’s character, world view, and political style can allow us to anticipate his or her performance as president. How would Barber have categorized Donald J. Trump, who appears to defy every presidential type and norm? This question suggests one of the most provocative and appealing reasons for students, scholars, and voters to re-read The Presidential Character at this particular juncture. What should we look for in a president? This text offers explanations and predictions of the performance of past presidents and presidential candidates with many cautionary tales looking forward.

Features

  • Presents a revised and updated foreword by presidential scholar George C. Edwards III, Distinguished Professor of Political Science at Texas A&M University, that includes the advent of the Trump Administration and highlights the book’s classic and enduring contributions.
  • Includes predictions of presidential performance from Nixon to Bush.
  • Analyzes the media’s role in providing information about the political candidates and in shaping public opinion of them.
  • Draws on historical, biographical, and psychological research to help voters make judicious choices in determining the country’s highest leaders.
  • Encourages citizens to be actively involved scholars, critics, and participants in their government.

Recenzijas

Praise for the Original Edition of The Presidential Character

Given the imposing power of our Presidents today, there are few subjects of greater import; and Barber has written an important book on the subject.

Bruce Mazlish in The New York Times

Comes closer to the truth about why presidents do what they do than any other author.

Hugh Sidney in Life Magazine

The most original, most provocative, and most daring study of the presidency of the past decade... A major intellectual breakthrough.

James MacGregor Burns (late of Williams College and the James MacGregor Burns Academy of Leadership of the School of Public Policy at the University of Maryland)

Preface xxi
1 Presidential Character And How To Foresee IT
1(11)
Personality Shapes Performance
4(1)
The Pattern of Character, World View, and Style
5(1)
The Power Situation and "Climate of Expectations"
6(1)
Predicting Presidents
7(1)
Four Types of Presidential Character
8(4)
2 Three Tragic Tales
12(36)
Wilson Defeats the League
13(5)
Hoover Withholds Relief
18(7)
Johnson Escalates the War
25(9)
Rigidification
34(1)
Wilson's Inner Struggle
35(4)
Hoover's Inner Struggle
39(3)
Johnson's Inner Struggle
42(4)
The Common Struggle
46(2)
3 The Active-Negative Presidents
48(36)
Wilson's Style
48(4)
Wilson's World View
52(2)
Wilson's Character
54(3)
Hoover's Style
57(4)
Hoover's World View
61(3)
Hoover's Character
64(2)
Johnson's Style
66(8)
Johnson's World View
74(5)
Johnson's Character
79(1)
The Active-Negative Character
80(4)
4 The Origins Of Presidential Compulsion
84(39)
Wilson Finds His Voice
85(16)
Hoover Discovers His Work
101(9)
Johnson Learns His People
110(10)
The Making of Active-Negative Presidents
120(3)
5 Richard Nixon: Construction And Destruction
123(46)
The Nixon Construction
123(1)
Nixon's Move Onstage
124(5)
The Shaping of Richard's World
129(6)
The Start of a Style
135(3)
Interlude
138(1)
Nixon Victorious
138(5)
The Nixon Destruction
143(1)
The Nixon Tyranny
144(2)
Old Reliable Nixon
146(3)
Nixon's Old Style and World View
149(1)
The Power Disease
150(5)
Rigidification Road
155(2)
The Fear of Scandal
157(1)
Choice or Necessity?
158(2)
Steps in Nixon's Rigidification
160(5)
Vulnerabilities to the Confidence Game
165(2)
Voices from the Past
167(2)
6 The Passive-Negative Presidents
169(25)
Calvin Coolidge in the White House
170(2)
Coolidge Emerging
172(7)
Eisenhower in the White House
179(6)
Eisenhower Emerging
185(7)
The Appeal of Duty
192(2)
7 The Passive-Positive Presidents
194(30)
Taft and TR
195(9)
Taft Finds Love and the Law
204(4)
Harding and His Friends
208(9)
Harding Develops Presidential Features
217(5)
The Lure of Political Love
222(2)
8 Reagan's Rise And Rule
224(42)
Winning Congress
232(4)
Regan the "Conservative"?
236(2)
Reagan's Rise: "Ideology" and Experience
238(4)
Shifting Gears
242(2)
Nancy and Her Friends
244(3)
The Rich Reagans in Politics
247(3)
"Supply-Siding" the Rich
250(3)
The Reagan Rhetoric
253(4)
The Fictionalization of Politics
257(5)
Planned Distraction
262(2)
The Threat Ahead
264(2)
9 Franklin D. Roosevelt And Active-Positive Affection
266(34)
Franklin's Growth to Joy in Work
268(19)
The Roosevelt Presidency
287(11)
The Thrust for Results
298(2)
10 Harry S Truman And Active-Positive Combat
300(41)
Truman Surprised by Grace
301(2)
Truman Makes Up His Mind
303(12)
Truman as President
315(24)
What Truman Was Not
339(2)
11 John F. Kennedy And Active-Positive Commitment
341(45)
Doubts About Kennedy
341(2)
Kennedy's Growing Pains
343(16)
Kennedy as President
359(25)
Kennedy's Commitment
384(2)
12 The Crucial Ford Transition
386(11)
Ford Revs Up
388(1)
Jerry's World
389(3)
The Ford Style
392(3)
Ford Model Presidency
395(2)
BEYOND CHARACTER
397(96)
13 Jimmy Carter: Predicted And Reviewed
398(58)
Jimmy Carter Predicted
398(2)
Archery: 1924
400(6)
Annapolis: 1943
406(3)
Plains: 1953
409(8)
Atlanta: 1962
417(6)
In and Out of the Slough of Despond: 1966
423(5)
The Road to Washington: 1976
428(5)
Jimmy Carter Reviewed
433(2)
Promises, Not Program
435(1)
Negotiating Washington
436(5)
Negotiating Peace
441(3)
Homework
444(1)
Rhetoric
444(2)
Carter's Presidential Character
446(2)
Character Test
448(3)
Test Results
451(2)
Power Situation
453(1)
Climate of Expectations
453(1)
Carter's World View
454(2)
14 George Bush: The World View Dilemma
456(28)
Unfolding the Bush Mystery
457(3)
The Bush Beginnings
460(5)
Bush the Aristocrat
465(2)
At Home: Love Them and Leave Them
467(1)
Off to Texas
468(2)
Off to Washington
470(3)
The Pattern from His Boyhood
473(1)
Off to War
474(3)
The President's Surprise
477(4)
Consent of the Governed?
481(1)
He Himself
482(2)
15 Adding It Up
484(9)
Character and Culture
484(1)
Politics and the Drive for Power
485(1)
Politics and the Search for Affection
486(2)
Politics and the Quest for Legitimacy
488(1)
Creative Politics
489(1)
Looking Forward
490(3)
Notes 493(18)
Index 511
James David Barber was a Duke University political scientist and provocateur best known for exploring the psychology of Oval Office aspirants and occupants. He spent years as a consultant to "NBC Nightly News" and as a board member of the Poynter Institute, a center for the study of journalism and media ethics in St. Petersburg, Florida.