For Which It Stands: An Anecdotal Biography of the American FlagOur national anthem celebrates it. Patriots wave it. Politicians of all kinds try to wrap themselves in it. It is saluted at baseball games, in parades, and on the most solemn of commemorative occasions. It was salvaged in the first hours following the dreadful events of September 11, and it stands outstretched just above the surface of the moon. It is, of course, the American flag, and there are few symbols as potent. With all the reverence and sacrifice and emotion it inspires, it is easy to lose sight of the fact that it is ultimately just a symbol. Why is it so powerful? Why does a piece of cloth resonate so loudly for so many? Why a flag, and why this flag, these stripes, those stars? In For Which It Stands, his timely, comprehensive, and engaging "biography" of the American flag, Michael Corcoran examines those questions and more as he explores the evolution of our most cherished emblem, from the days preceding the Revolution through the nationwide resurgence of patriotism in the aftermath of September 11. Corcoran traces the entire life of the colors, holding forth on a number of engrossing topics, including: • The fluid design of the flag, the subject of much contentious debate on the part of the founding fathers, and until fairly recently, not officially codified. • The various alternative flags ingrained in the national consciousness, among them the defiant, rattlesnake-adorned "Don't Tread on Me" banner and the "Stars and Bars" of the Confederacy. • The role of the colors in war, from how to start a fight with England (raising a flag declaring indepen-dence, high enough for the British Army in Boston to see it, ought to do the trick) to the question of whether to remove from the banner the stars emblematic of the states that seceded during the Civil War, to the giddy ubiquity of the flag following World War II. Corcoran addresses all these matters and more (including the particularly vexing questions raised by flag burning: Is it such an affront that it warrants a constitutional amendment outlawing that method of protest, or is it perhaps the single most potent expression of our right to free speech, and therefore profoundly American?) as he delves into the wind-tangled history of "Old Glory," an entertaining jumble of much-loved myth and obscure facts. Thoughtful, droll, and fast-paced, For Which It Stands definitively tells the story of America's most recognizable icon, from Bunker Hill to Iwo Jima to Tranquillity Base -- and beyond. |
Hvad folk siger - Skriv en anmeldelse
Vi har ikke fundet nogen anmeldelser de normale steder.
Andre udgaver - Se alle
For Which It Stands: An Anecdotal Biography of the American Flag Michael Corcoran Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2007 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
Albany Congress American flag Annin April army banner battle battlefield Betsy Ross blue canton blue field British bunting burning canton citizens Civil colonies commander Confederate Congress Continental Colors court cross difficult emhlem England feet fifteen fight fighting find fire fired first first flag five Flag Code flag desecration flag’s flew floor flying Fort McHenry Fort Sumter George George Henry Preble giant star guys hand hoisted Hopkinson king king’s later Libby Lincoln looked Massachusetts meaning ment national flag Navy never office officer official old flag patriotic Philadelphia Poinsett Preble president raise the flag rattlesnake red and white reflection Regiment rows says Smith says Whitney Smith sewing ships significance soldiers specific speech Star-Spangled Banner Stars and Stripes story streets Sumter symbol there’s thing thirteen stars thirteen stripes thought tion took U.S. Supreme Court Union Jack United Washington white stripes Whitney Smith words World wrote York
Populære passager
Side 1 - that the flag of the thirteen United States be thirteen stripes, alternate red and white; that the union be thirteen stars, white in a blue field, representing a new constellation.