Welcome Remarks for The Age of Acrimony: How Americans Fought to Fix their Democracy, 1865鈥1915
Greetings from the 威尼斯人娱乐场. I鈥檓 David Ferriero, Archivist of the United States, and it's my pleasure to welcome you to today鈥檚 virtual author lecture with Jon Grinspan, author of The Age of Acrimony.
Before we begin, though, I鈥檇 like to tell you about two upcoming programs you can view on our YouTube channel.
Tonight at 7 p.m., Karen Tumulty will discuss Nancy Reagan鈥檚 role as partner to the President, which she profiles in her new book, The Triumph of Nancy Reagan.
And on Tuesday, May 4, noted constitutional scholar Akhil Reed Amar will discuss his new book, The Words That Made Us鈥an account of how Americans wrestled with weighty constitution questions during the country鈥檚 first half century.
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Political campaigns in our lifetimes have been waged in large part through electronic media鈥攆irst on television and later on digital media. In the 19th century, however, campaigning was a much more personal exercise. Partisans took to the streets for their candidates in what our guest author Jon Grinspan calls, 鈥渢he loudest, closest, most violent elections in U.S. history.鈥
The Gilded Age has a reputation as an age of excess, and that applied to electioneering as well. Voters in great numbers performed their civic duty, but the path to the polls was hardly 鈥渃ivil.鈥
In the 20th century, elections moved away from the raucous confrontations of those days, but the aggressive partisanship of the political battles sounds more and more familiar. By looking at our past, as described in The Age of Acrimony, we hope to gain more understanding of our democracy today.
As Michael Barone wrote recently in the Wall Street Journal 鈥溾t鈥檚 hard not to see echoes of our current politics in historian John Grinspan鈥檚 chronicle of this rambunctious period. The Age of Acrimony isn鈥檛 a detailed narrative of the era鈥檚 political struggles or a political-science thesis with table and graphs鈥r. Grinspan鈥檚 focus is on practical politics, which in this period meant mass politics鈥攖he highest rates of voter turnout and mass participation in the nation鈥檚 history.鈥
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Jon Grinspan, the Curator of Political History at the Smithsonian鈥檚 National Museum of American History, studies the deep history of American democracy, especially the wild partisan campaigns of the 1800s. As curator, he collects objects from current protests, conventions, elections, and riots for the Smithsonian to try to preserve our own heated moment for generations to come.
He frequently contributes to the New York Times, and his work has been featured in The New Yorker, the Washington Post, The Atlantic, and elsewhere. He has been interviewed on C-SPAN, National Public Radio, NBC鈥檚 鈥淢eet the Press,鈥 PBS鈥檚 鈥淭he Open Mind,鈥 and other programs. Grinspan is a former National Endowment for Humanities Fellow, Massachusetts Historical Society Fellow, Smithsonian Institution Postdoctoral Fellow, and Jefferson Scholars Foundation Dissertation Fellow at the University of Virginia.
Now let鈥檚 hear from Jon Grinspan. Thank you for joining us today.