The education of Henry Adams : an autobiography.
Material type:
- 0395083524
- E 175.5 .A33 1971
Browsing NU BALIWAG shelves, Shelving location: Reference, Collection: Reference Close shelf browser (Hides shelf browser)
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
||
REF D 810 .J4 .F73 1997 Anne Frank : the diary of a young girl / | REF D 810 .S7 .K34 2016 The secret history of World War II : spies, code breakers & covert operations / | REF D 967 .W47 2019 Western Europe. | REF E 175.5 .A33 1971 The education of Henry Adams : an autobiography. | REF E 302.6 .F8 .K74 2008 Benjamin Franklin / | REF E 457.2 .P45 2017 Lincoln on leadership for today : Abraham Lincoln's approach to twenty-first-century issues / | REF E 457.45 .D74 2012 Rise to greatness : Abraham Lincoln and America's most perilous year / |
Includes index.
I. Quincy (1838-1848).--II. Boston (1848-1854).--III. Washington (1850-1854).--IV. Harvard College (1854-1858).--V. Berlin (1854-1859).--VI. Rome (1859-1860).--VII. Treason (1860-1831).
Few works have so firmly established their position in American literature as The education of Henry Adams. As a man of extraordinary gifts and learning and a member of one of the greatest American families, Henry Adams wrote an insightful exploration of himself and the tumultuous age in which he lived. In the words of Van Wyck Brooks, he "revealed a phase of American history with unparalleled boldness and truth." In spite of his illustrious background and Harvard schooling, Henry Adams asserts that his conventional education was defective because it did not prepare him to live in a world transformed by the new science and the new technology. His intention was to write a kind of handbook to prepare "young men, in universities and elsewhere, to be men of the world, equipped for any emergency." The result is what many consider to be one of the finest autobiographies ever written.
There are no comments on this title.