Taylor's erudite and engaging debut vividly demonstrates the challenges of transmitting information in the early modern age.<br />—Barbara Spindel, <i>Christian Science Monitor</i>
Jordan E. Taylor's book <i>Misinformation Nation: Foreign News and the Politics of Truth in Revolutionary America</i> tackles this topic in a masterful way, examining the nature of news and the factors that affected it, from the advent of revolution through the rise of federalism.<br />—Don N. Hagist, <i>Journal of the American Revolution</i>
A must-read intervention in the historiography of the American Revolution, a newspaper-driven perspective on paranoia, propaganda, and the emergence of a national identity.<br />—<i>Contingent Magazine</i>
<i>Misinformation Nation</i> makes us grapple with an entirely new dimension of the Revolution and early republic, while providing an engaging narrative with clear similarities to present struggles.<br />—<i>H-Early America</i>
Throughout this thought-provoking and engaging book, Taylor examines how people got information, what they did with it, and why the circulation of more information often led to polarized, volatile, and even revolutionary politics.<br />—<i>Society for U.S. Intellectual History</i>
Taylor convincingly demonstrates that arguments over the politics of truth have roots that go back to the era of the American Revolution and the founding of the nation. <i>Misinformation Nation</i> is timely, but its usefulness is not limited to the current moment.<br />—<i>Eighteenth-Century Studies</i>
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Jordan E. Taylor (BLOOMINGTON, IN) is an editor and historian of American media and politics.