Rejecting political narrative as debilitating to historical scholarship., Norman Pollack employs textual exegesis in this effort to construct a coherent intellectual history of Populism. Interspersing extensive quotations with his own paraphrases, elaborations, and inferences, Pollack examines a handful of Populist writings and extravagantly maintains that his work reconceptualizes both the nature and the study of Populism. After struggling through nearly 350 pages of opaque and often tumid prose, few historians will accept such claims. Even those sympathetic to this style of history, which ignores the specific political context of the documents analyzed, will worry about some issues that Pollack dismisses here. In The Populist Response...
Because Kansas has been called “the leading Midwestern Populist state,” and the Midwestern phrase wa...
Because Kansas has been called “the leading Midwestern Populist state,” and the Midwestern phrase wa...
Across the landscape of modern American politics, the Populist moment, as Lawrence Goodwyn\u27s 19...
The book consists mainly of a collection of reworked articles that appeared in various journals from...
William Alfred Peffer, from Kansas, the first Peoples Party United States Senator, wrote this analys...
Review of: American Populism: A Social History, 1877-1898. McMath, Robert C., Jr
Robert Cherny has made an important contribution to the social and political history of the Great Pl...
This study focuses attention of the People’s party which existed for a short time in the 1890s. Desp...
Jan-Werner Müller’s (2016) account of populism purports to establish a minimalistic conception of po...
Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept, of History.Hist...
After nearly forty years, John D. Hicks\u27 The Populist Revolt remains the standard work on Populis...
This paper asks whether history should change the way in which economists and economic historians th...
During the six decades since publication of John Hicks\u27s The Populist Revolt, scholars have produ...
O. Gene Clanton (1934’2017) was professor emeritus of history at Washington State University, where ...
Peter Argersinger is one of the best known and influential writers on American Populism. His clear, ...
Because Kansas has been called “the leading Midwestern Populist state,” and the Midwestern phrase wa...
Because Kansas has been called “the leading Midwestern Populist state,” and the Midwestern phrase wa...
Across the landscape of modern American politics, the Populist moment, as Lawrence Goodwyn\u27s 19...
The book consists mainly of a collection of reworked articles that appeared in various journals from...
William Alfred Peffer, from Kansas, the first Peoples Party United States Senator, wrote this analys...
Review of: American Populism: A Social History, 1877-1898. McMath, Robert C., Jr
Robert Cherny has made an important contribution to the social and political history of the Great Pl...
This study focuses attention of the People’s party which existed for a short time in the 1890s. Desp...
Jan-Werner Müller’s (2016) account of populism purports to establish a minimalistic conception of po...
Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Dept, of History.Hist...
After nearly forty years, John D. Hicks\u27 The Populist Revolt remains the standard work on Populis...
This paper asks whether history should change the way in which economists and economic historians th...
During the six decades since publication of John Hicks\u27s The Populist Revolt, scholars have produ...
O. Gene Clanton (1934’2017) was professor emeritus of history at Washington State University, where ...
Peter Argersinger is one of the best known and influential writers on American Populism. His clear, ...
Because Kansas has been called “the leading Midwestern Populist state,” and the Midwestern phrase wa...
Because Kansas has been called “the leading Midwestern Populist state,” and the Midwestern phrase wa...
Across the landscape of modern American politics, the Populist moment, as Lawrence Goodwyn\u27s 19...