Bosom Friends: The Intimate World of James Buchanan and William Rufus King

Author:   Thomas J. Balcerski (Assistant Professor of History, Assistant Professor of History, Eastern Connecticut State University)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
ISBN:  

9780190914592


Pages:   350
Publication Date:   05 November 2019
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
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Bosom Friends: The Intimate World of James Buchanan and William Rufus King


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Author:   Thomas J. Balcerski (Assistant Professor of History, Assistant Professor of History, Eastern Connecticut State University)
Publisher:   Oxford University Press Inc
Imprint:   Oxford University Press Inc
Dimensions:   Width: 15.70cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 23.60cm
Weight:   0.658kg
ISBN:  

9780190914592


ISBN 10:   0190914599
Pages:   350
Publication Date:   05 November 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   To order   Availability explained
Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us.

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Reviews

Bosom Friends is not merely a fascinating story told by a gifted young historian, but a potentially pathbreaking study that suggests new ways to understand political alliances in the late antebellum years. Far richer than simply a dual biography of two influential public men, this volume instead situates the much gossiped-about King-Buchanan relationship within larger patterns of intimate male friendships common to the nineteenth century. An illuminating and intelligent work of scholarship. -- Douglas R. Egerton, author of Year of Meteors: Douglas, Lincoln, and the Election That Brought on the Civil War This original dual biography offers a good deal more than a spirited argument about the nature of the Buchanan-King relationship; it sheds new light on the meaning and importance of male intimacy in antebellum political culture. --Amy S. Greenberg, author of Lady First: The World of First Lady Sarah Polk Bosom Friends is a revelation. Exhaustively researched, it sheds fresh light on antebellum politics through its discerning analysis of a distinctive, intimate friendship that crossed sectional, if not sexual, boundaries. Prepare to be surprised and enlightened by Balcerski's findings. --Michael J. Birkner, Gettysburg College Bosom Friends takes us back into a nineteenth-century political world that relied not only on vicious partisanship but also intimate, loving male friendships that provided affection and support as well as serving to advance common political interests. In this absorbing new book, Thomas Balcerski explores the boardinghouses where most early nineteenth-century congressmen lived and asks how Americans understood the close friendships that developed in these settings. Focusing on the friendship between Buchanan and King, Balcerski pays careful attention to the ways in which contemporaries described, praised, and attacked the intimate yet public bond between these two men. -- Richard Godbeer, author of The Overflowing of Friendship: Love Between Men and the Creation of the American Republic With Bosom Friends, Thomas Balcerski enlarges our understanding of the factors that can erode friendships and rupture nations. Rarely has any scholarly treatment of the disintegrating Union felt more urgent. --Richard Norton Smith, Wall Street Journal Beyond the were-they-or-weren>'t-they question, Balcerski>'s book provides a useful understanding of the way personal networks and informal groups, such as messes, ran Washington in the mid 19th century. James Buchanan was a central part of that world for several decades, and if he had won the White House in his early fifties instead of his mid sixties, today we might rank him among the best presidents. Instead he became the dog who finally caught the car, only to see it burst into flames. --Fred Schwarz, National Review To understand the lives of King and Buchanan, one must inherently understand politics, of which much of this book consists. This is necessary, since it also shows division between the two men, ultimately both physically and emotionally; the scrappy political competition in which they engaged; and an untraversable gulf of disagreement DL facets that, individually and together, are fascinating. Readers will clearly see the affection between the two men here, though we>'ll never completely know the true nature of it: possibly-argument-settling written communication between the two disappeared shortly after the Civil War. --Washington Blade, Terri Schlichenmeyer


In Bosom Friends...Balcerski argues that the personal and the political are inextricable in Buchanan's biography. -- Rachel Hope Cleves, Journal of the Civil War Era Thomas J. Balcerski's dual biography of James Buchanan of Pennsylvania and William Rufus King of Alabama is deeply researched and refreshingly jargon free. -- Sheila Skemp, Journal of American History As an analysis of the entangled relationships that formed between public menDLpersonal friendships rooted in intimacy, political friendships that advanced common interestsDLBalcerski offers the best study to date....As political and social history, Bosom Friends is an impressive study and should be read by anyone who wants to understand how the person and the political interacted in the early-nineteenth-century United States. -- Craig Thompson Friend, Journal of the Early Republic A stellar contribution to the lively field of antebellum and Civil War-era political history.....By situating the deep bond between these two nineteenth-century Democrats within its social, cultural, and political context, Balcerski offers fresh insight into both men and illuminates the significance of male friendship in the turbulent world of antebellum American politics....Thanks to studies such as this one, nineteenth-century US political history is flourishing as scholars excavate the human experience of politics and illuminate how power was won, wielded, and lost amid wrenching partisan and sectional conflicts. -- Michael E. Woods, Alabama Review Balcerski impressively balances the personal and the worldly to produce an original and engaging study both of two men and of the wider antebellum world which they lived in and helped shape....This is certainly the definitive account of the intimate friendship between Buchanan and King. In addition, Balcerski makes important original contributions to our understanding of male friendships and politics in the antebellum United States. This is an excellent first book from a promising young scholar. -- Andrew L. Slap, American Historical Review Engrossing, imaginative, and well written....Balcerski has written an illuminating revisionist study that adds to our understanding of multiple overlapping topics: King and Buchanan, both individually and together; Jacksonian party politics; the sectional crisis; nineteenth-century bachelorhood and masculinity; the nature and role of antebellum political friendships; the interplay between public and private in such friendships; and the historical memory of the two men and their relationship. -- Gregory L. Kaster,, History: Reviews of New Books There has, over the last decade or so, been a growing interest in the personal behind the political ... This study of two of the nation's most active politicians is a very fine example of the value in this approach ... Balcerski's original study helps us understand better the reasons behind Buchanan's bad reputation. Bringing King and Buchanan together, we see them, and their world, with far greater clarity. -- Susan-Mary Grant, History Today Bosom Friends is not merely a fascinating story told by a gifted young historian, but a potentially pathbreaking study that suggests new ways to understand political alliances in the late antebellum years. Far richer than simply a dual biography of two influential public men, this volume instead situates the much gossiped-about King-Buchanan relationship within larger patterns of intimate male friendships common to the nineteenth century. An illuminating and intelligent work of scholarship. -- Douglas R. Egerton, author of Year of Meteors: Douglas, Lincoln, and the Election That Brought on the Civil War This original dual biography offers a good deal more than a spirited argument about the nature of the Buchanan-King relationship; it sheds new light on the meaning and importance of male intimacy in antebellum political culture. --Amy S. Greenberg, author of Lady First: The World of First Lady Sarah Polk Bosom Friends is a revelation. Exhaustively researched, it sheds fresh light on antebellum politics through its discerning analysis of a distinctive, intimate friendship that crossed sectional, if not sexual, boundaries. Prepare to be surprised and enlightened by Balcerski's findings. --Michael J. Birkner, Gettysburg College Bosom Friends takes us back into a nineteenth-century political world that relied not only on vicious partisanship but also intimate, loving male friendships that provided affection and support as well as serving to advance common political interests. In this absorbing new book, Thomas Balcerski explores the boardinghouses where most early nineteenth-century congressmen lived and asks how Americans understood the close friendships that developed in these settings. Focusing on the friendship between Buchanan and King, Balcerski pays careful attention to the ways in which contemporaries described, praised, and attacked the intimate yet public bond between these two men. -- Richard Godbeer, author of The Overflowing of Friendship: Love Between Men and the Creation of the American Republic With Bosom Friends, Thomas Balcerski enlarges our understanding of the factors that can erode friendships and rupture nations. Rarely has any scholarly treatment of the disintegrating Union felt more urgent. --Richard Norton Smith, Wall Street Journal Beyond the were-they-or-weren't-they question, Balcerski's book provides a useful understanding of the way personal networks and informal groups, such as messes, ran Washington in the mid 19th century. James Buchanan was a central part of that world for several decades, and if he had won the White House in his early fifties instead of his mid sixties, today we might rank him among the best presidents. Instead he became the dog who finally caught the car, only to see it burst into flames. --Fred Schwarz, National Review To understand the lives of King and Buchanan, one must inherently understand politics, of which much of this book consists. This is necessary, since it also shows division between the two men, ultimately both physically and emotionally; the scrappy political competition in which they engaged; and an untraversable gulf of disagreement DL facets that, individually and together, are fascinating. Readers will clearly see the affection between the two men here, though we'll never completely know the true nature of it: possibly-argument-settling written communication between the two disappeared shortly after the Civil War. --Washington Blade, Terri Schlichenmeyer


Bosom Friends takes us back into a nineteenth-century political world that relied not only on vicious partisanship but also intimate, loving male friendships that provided affection and support as well as serving to advance common political interests. In this absorbing new book, Thomas Balcerski explores the boardinghouses where most early nineteenth-century congressmen lived and asks how Americans understood the close friendships that developed in these settings. Focusing on the friendship between Buchanan and King, Balcerski pays careful attention to the ways in which contemporaries described, praised, and attacked the intimate yet public bond between these two men. * Richard Godbeer, author of The Overflowing of Friendship: Love Between Men and the Creation of the American Republic * Bosom Friends is a revelation. Exhaustively researched, it sheds fresh light on antebellum politics through its discerning analysis of a distinctive, intimate friendship that crossed sectional, if not sexual, boundaries. Prepare to be surprised and enlightened by Balcerski's findings. * Michael J. Birkner, Gettysburg College * This original dual biography offers a good deal more than a spirited argument about the nature of the Buchanan-King relationship; it sheds new light on the meaning and importance of male intimacy in antebellum political culture. * Amy S. Greenberg, author of Lady First: The World of First Lady Sarah Polk * Bosom Friends is not merely a fascinating story told by a gifted young historian, but a potentially pathbreaking study that suggests new ways to understand political alliances in the late antebellum years. Far richer than simply a dual biography of two influential public men, this volume instead situates the much gossiped-about King-Buchanan relationship within larger patterns of intimate male friendships common to the nineteenth century. An illuminating and intelligent work of scholarship. * Douglas R. Egerton, author of Year of Meteors: Douglas, Lincoln, and the Election That Brought on the Civil War *


Bosom Friends is not merely a fascinating story told by a gifted young historian, but a potentially pathbreaking study that suggests new ways to understand political alliances in the late antebellum years. Far richer than simply a dual biography of two influential public men, this volume instead situates the much gossiped-about King-Buchanan relationship within larger patterns of intimate male friendships common to the nineteenth century. An illuminating and intelligent work of scholarship. -- Douglas R. Egerton, author of Year of Meteors: Douglas, Lincoln, and the Election That Brought on the Civil War This original dual biography offers a good deal more than a spirited argument about the nature of the Buchanan-King relationship; it sheds new light on the meaning and importance of male intimacy in antebellum political culture. --Amy S. Greenberg, author of Lady First: The World of First Lady Sarah Polk Bosom Friends is a revelation. Exhaustively researched, it sheds fresh light on antebellum politics through its discerning analysis of a distinctive, intimate friendship that crossed sectional, if not sexual, boundaries. Prepare to be surprised and enlightened by Balcerski's findings. --Michael J. Birkner, Gettysburg College Bosom Friends takes us back into a nineteenth-century political world that relied not only on vicious partisanship but also intimate, loving male friendships that provided affection and support as well as serving to advance common political interests. In this absorbing new book, Thomas Balcerski explores the boardinghouses where most early nineteenth-century congressmen lived and asks how Americans understood the close friendships that developed in these settings. Focusing on the friendship between Buchanan and King, Balcerski pays careful attention to the ways in which contemporaries described, praised, and attacked the intimate yet public bond between these two men. -- Richard Godbeer, author of The Overflowing of Friendship: Love Between Men and the Creation of the American Republic


Bosom Friends is not merely a fascinating story told by a gifted young historian, but a potentially pathbreaking study that suggests new ways to understand political alliances in the late antebellum years. Far richer than simply a dual biography of two influential public men, this volume instead situates the much gossiped-about King-Buchanan relationship within larger patterns of intimate male friendships common to the nineteenth century. An illuminating and intelligent work of scholarship. -- Douglas R. Egerton, author of Year of Meteors: Douglas, Lincoln, and the Election That Brought on the Civil War This original dual biography offers a good deal more than a spirited argument about the nature of the Buchanan-King relationship; it sheds new light on the meaning and importance of male intimacy in antebellum political culture. --Amy S. Greenberg, author of Lady First: The World of First Lady Sarah Polk Bosom Friends is a revelation. Exhaustively researched, it sheds fresh light on antebellum politics through its discerning analysis of a distinctive, intimate friendship that crossed sectional, if not sexual, boundaries. Prepare to be surprised and enlightened by Balcerski's findings. --Michael J. Birkner, Gettysburg College Bosom Friends takes us back into a nineteenth-century political world that relied not only on vicious partisanship but also intimate, loving male friendships that provided affection and support as well as serving to advance common political interests. In this absorbing new book, Thomas Balcerski explores the boardinghouses where most early nineteenth-century congressmen lived and asks how Americans understood the close friendships that developed in these settings. Focusing on the friendship between Buchanan and King, Balcerski pays careful attention to the ways in which contemporaries described, praised, and attacked the intimate yet public bond between these two men. -- Richard Godbeer, author of The Overflowing of Friendship: Love Between Men and the Creation of the American Republic


This original dual biography offers a good deal more than a spirited argument about the nature of the Buchanan-King relationship; it sheds new light on the meaning and importance of male intimacy in antebellum political culture. --Amy S. Greenberg, author of Lady First: The World of First Lady Sarah Polk Bosom Friends is a revelation. Exhaustively researched, it sheds fresh light on antebellum politics through its discerning analysis of a distinctive, intimate friendship that crossed sectional, if not sexual, boundaries. Prepare to be surprised and enlightened by Balcerski's findings. --Michael J. Birkner, Gettysburg College Bosom Friends takes us back into a nineteenth-century political world that relied not only on vicious partisanship but also intimate, loving male friendships that provided affection and support as well as serving to advance common political interests. In this absorbing new book, Thomas Balcerski takes us back into the boardinghouses where most early nineteenth-century congressmen lived and asks how Americans understood the close friendships that developed in these settings. Focusing on the friendship between Buchanan and King, Balcerski pays careful attention to the ways in which contemporaries described, praised, and attacked the intimate yet public bond between these two men. --Richard Godbeer, author of The Overflowing of Friendship: Love Between Men and the Creation of the American Republic


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Thomas J. Balcerski is an Assistant Professor of History at Eastern Connecticut State University.

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