Description

Book Synopsis
Weaving together biography and political history, Michael Woods restores Jefferson Davis and Stephen Douglas's fatefully entwined lives and careers to the centre of the Civil War era.

Trade Review
Speaks to the internal tensions within party organizations, the blinding force of ambition, and the ways distrust of democratic processes and institutions can destroy democracy itself. In that, it is a book for our time." - Library Journal

"Even readers who find the Civil War or politics boring could find this well-written narrative gripping. It helps especially now for readers needing to escape the present. All this solid but entertaining history really lacks for is background music." -New York Journal of Books

"Woods has written one of the most engaging and accessible histories of the pre-Civil War Democratic Party to date. . . . [Arguing Until Doomsday] advances the field of American political history and affords nuance to a period that is always in danger of becoming oversimplified." - The Civil War Monitor

"This impressive new book . . . deftly recovers the dynamism and disagreements that animated, and ultimately destroyed, the Democratic Party on the eve of the Civil War. . . . Diligently researched, closely argued, and clearly written, Arguing Until Doomsday is an essential book for students of antebellum politics and the road to Civil War." - Civil War News

"Woods is to be congratulated for a study that is grounded in extensive research, both in primary sources and in the enormous secondary literature. . . . A very readable, informative, and judicious account." - Journal of the Civil War Era

"Woods's dual biography is elegantly written, clearly and persuasively argued, and filled with fresh and astute interpretations that restore the antebellum Democracy's much-neglected complexity and internal diversity." - Journal of Southern History

…a thoughtful and original account of how the Democratic Party and, more broadly, the nation were not big enough for the outsized figures of Douglas and Davis…this dual biography packs a historiographical punch." – American Nineteenth-Century History

"Woods' engrossing book provides a needed reexamination of the demise of the antebellum Democratic Party through the lives of two men who hastened its dissolution. . . . Thoroughly satisfying."—Louisiana History

Arguing until Doomsday

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    Order before 4pm today for delivery by Fri 19 Jun 2026.

    A Paperback by Michael E. Woods

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      View other formats and editions of Arguing until Doomsday by Michael E. Woods

      Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
      Publication Date: 1/1/2024 12:02:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9781469679211, 978-1469679211
      ISBN10: 1469679213

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Weaving together biography and political history, Michael Woods restores Jefferson Davis and Stephen Douglas's fatefully entwined lives and careers to the centre of the Civil War era.

      Trade Review
      Speaks to the internal tensions within party organizations, the blinding force of ambition, and the ways distrust of democratic processes and institutions can destroy democracy itself. In that, it is a book for our time." - Library Journal

      "Even readers who find the Civil War or politics boring could find this well-written narrative gripping. It helps especially now for readers needing to escape the present. All this solid but entertaining history really lacks for is background music." -New York Journal of Books

      "Woods has written one of the most engaging and accessible histories of the pre-Civil War Democratic Party to date. . . . [Arguing Until Doomsday] advances the field of American political history and affords nuance to a period that is always in danger of becoming oversimplified." - The Civil War Monitor

      "This impressive new book . . . deftly recovers the dynamism and disagreements that animated, and ultimately destroyed, the Democratic Party on the eve of the Civil War. . . . Diligently researched, closely argued, and clearly written, Arguing Until Doomsday is an essential book for students of antebellum politics and the road to Civil War." - Civil War News

      "Woods is to be congratulated for a study that is grounded in extensive research, both in primary sources and in the enormous secondary literature. . . . A very readable, informative, and judicious account." - Journal of the Civil War Era

      "Woods's dual biography is elegantly written, clearly and persuasively argued, and filled with fresh and astute interpretations that restore the antebellum Democracy's much-neglected complexity and internal diversity." - Journal of Southern History

      …a thoughtful and original account of how the Democratic Party and, more broadly, the nation were not big enough for the outsized figures of Douglas and Davis…this dual biography packs a historiographical punch." – American Nineteenth-Century History

      "Woods' engrossing book provides a needed reexamination of the demise of the antebellum Democratic Party through the lives of two men who hastened its dissolution. . . . Thoroughly satisfying."—Louisiana History

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