Sex and the Founding Fathers

Sex and the Founding Fathers

2012 • 231 pages

Biographers, journalists, and satirists have long used the subject of sex to define the masculine character and political authority of America's Founding Fathers. Tracing these commentaries on the Revolutionary Era's major political figures in Sex and the Founding Fathers, Thomas Foster shows how continual attempts to reveal the true character of these men instead exposes much more about Americans and American culture than about the Founders themselves. Sex and the Founding Fathers examines the remarkable and varied assessments of the intimate lives of George Washington, Thomas Jefferson, John Adams, Benjamin Franklin, Alexander Hamilton, and Gouverneur Morris from their own time to ours. Interpretations can change radically; consider how Jefferson has been variously idealized as a chaste widower, condemned as a child molester, and recently celebrated as a multicultural hero. Foster considers the public and private images of these generally romanticized leaders to show how each generation uses them to reshape and reinforce American civic and national identity.

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4 released books

Sexuality Studies

Sexuality Studies is a 4-book series first released in 2003 with contributions by Jean Bobby Noble, Carellin Brooks, and Helen Hok-sze Leung.

Masculinities without Men?: Female Masculinity in Twentieth-Century Fictions
Every Inch a Woman: Phallic Possession, Femininity, and the Text
Undercurrents: Queer Culture and Postcolonial Hong Kong
Sex and the Founding Fathers

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