Essential to the myth of Lincoln, writes University of Nebraska historian Winkle, is the image of the log cabin: the 16th president's humble origins made his rise to the White House astounding. Winkle shows that though his roots were modest, Lincoln was hardly a self-made man. His rise from "frontier poverty" to the presidency occurred in a specific historic context, and the strength of this biography lies less in any startling new findings about Lincoln's early years and more in Winkle's careful and consistent placement of Lincoln's choices within larger sociocultural trends. For example, historians have made much of the early death of Lincoln's mother, Nancy. But the loss of one's mother at an early age was common then, says Winkle, and scholars may have overstated the impact it had on the future president. He also examines Lincoln's much-analyzed estrangement from his father--he refused to go to his father's sick bed or even to attend his funeral--in a broader historical context. Winkle sets this family drama against the backdrop of changes in economic and family values: as production increasingly left the home for the factory in antebellum America, "fathers... lost their privileged, patriarchal status." Similarly, Winkle describes Lincoln's turbulent courtship of Mary Todd in light of changes in the institution of marriage during the 1830s and '40s. Does all this contextualizing add up to a sweepingly revised biography of Lincoln, or even to a grand new understanding of his "rise"? No. But Winkle's attention to the particularities of time and place reminds readers that Lincoln was not simply an underdog hero who appeared on the scene in 1860, and this outlook distinguishes his book from the endless stream of Lincoln biographies.
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With economic disparities increasing in recent decades, the question of social mobility in the U.S. has become much debated. Of course, the prime "proof" that anyone with talent and ambition can "make it" has been the career of Abraham Lincoln. Winkle, a professor of American history at the University of Nebraska, examines the rise of Lincoln from his "humble" birth to his victory in the 1860 presidential election. Along the way, he dispels several myths. Although Lincoln was certainly born into modest circumstances, they were average and materially adequate by nineteenth-century standards of frontier life. The supposed love affair with Ann Rutledge probably never happened and was not connected to his bouts of melancholia. Despite current revisionist efforts to denigrate his views, Lincoln's attitudes toward racism in general and African Americans in particular were amazingly liberal for his time. This is a revealing, easily digestible, and rather original perspective on a man who continues to fascinate us. Jay Freeman
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