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MARC Record from marc_uic

Record ID marc_uic/UIC_2022.mrc:113397061:6246
Source marc_uic
Download Link /show-records/marc_uic/UIC_2022.mrc:113397061:6246?format=raw

LEADER: 06246cam a22007091i 4500
001 992736212005897
005 20220202123410.0
008 720720t19651965nyu b 001 0 eng
010 $a 65017440
016 $a(AMICUS)000004385564
029 1 $aAU@$b000045069822
029 1 $aAU@$b000061317135
029 1 $aNLC$b000004385564
029 1 $aNZ1$b3318474
029 1 $aNZ1$b693814
035 $z(OCoLC)1334610$z(OCoLC)1708499$z(OCoLC)27826101$z(OCoLC)679855063$z(OCoLC)855162544$z(OCoLC)977651586$z(OCoLC)978876320$z(OCoLC)988653049$z(OCoLC)993430751$z(OCoLC)1004444591$z(OCoLC)1010743905$z(OCoLC)1020242719$z(OCoLC)1048165448$z(OCoLC)1052691016$z(OCoLC)1098376423$z(OCoLC)1166478189$z(OCoLC)1166533176$z(OCoLC)1193065306$z(OCoLC)1200985209$z(OCoLC)1201013058$z(OCoLC)1201577375$z(OCoLC)1201614893$z(OCoLC)1201637133$z(OCoLC)1201857002$z(OCoLC)1201868991$z(OCoLC)1201877067$z(OCoLC)1201886663$z(OCoLC)1202012420$z(OCoLC)1202019373$z(OCoLC)1222880519$z(OCoLC)1225649263
035 $a(OCoLC)ocm00360759
035 $a(EXLNZ-01CARLI_NETWORK)991024875619705816
040 $aDLC$beng$cDLC$dSER$dORL$dCSU$dEL$$dBAKER$dLVB$dSTF$dUPM$dWPB$dGVA$dNA5$dOCLCF$dALAUL$dMUO$dSHH$dNCRJL$dKKX$dMFM$dNLC$dGZM$dOPT$dOUN$dOCLCO$dCAOXN$dVVB$dXMC$dIL4J6$dOCLCO$dOCLCQ$dHIR$dOCLCO$dTUU
042 $apremarc
043 $an-us---
049 $aJFKA
050 00 $aE301$b.B6
051 $aE301$b.B6 Copy 5
051 $aE301$b.B6 1966
055 1 $aE301.B6
080 0 $aE301 .B6
082 0 $a917.303
100 1 $aBoorstin, Daniel J.$q(Daniel Joseph),$d1914-2004,$eauthor.
245 14 $aThe Americans :$bthe national experience /$cby Daniel J. Boorstin.
264 1 $aNew York :$bRandom House,$c[1965]
264 4 $c©1965
300 $a517 pages ;$c25 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
338 $avolume$bnc$2rdacarrier
586 $aSociety of American Historians Francis Parkman Prize, 1966.
504 $a"Bibliographical notes": pages 433-495
500 $aContinuation of the author's The Americans: the colonial experience.
500 $aIncludes index.
505 0 $aPt. 1: the versatiles: New Englanders -- The sea leads everywhere -- Inventing resources: ice for the Indies -- Inventing resources: granite for a new stone age -- Organizing the American factory -- From skill to know-how: "a circulating current: -- A common-law way of thinking -- The improving spirit -- Pt. 2: the transients: joiners -- On the continent-ocean: men move in groups -- The organizers -- Community before government -- The natural law of transient communities: claim clubs and priority rule -- The natural law of transient communities: vigilantism and majority rule -- Leaving things behind -- Getting there first -- The democracy of haste -- Pt. 3: the upstarts: boosters -- The businessman as an American institution -- The booster press -- "Palaces of the public: -- The balloon-frame house -- Culture with many capitals: the booster college -- Competitive communities -- Pt. 4: the rooted and the uprooted: Southerners, white and black -- How the planter lost his versatility -- Indelible immigrants -- Invisible communities: the Negroes' churches -- The unwritten law: how it grew in slavery -- How Southern gentlemen became honor-bound -- Metaphysical politics -- Pt. 5: the vagueness of the land -- A half-known country: settlement before discovery -- Packaging a continent -- Government as a service institution -- Uncertain boundaries -- A dubious destiny -- Pt. 6: American ways of talking -- An ungoverned vocabulary -- Tall talk: half-truth or half-lie? -- Booster talk: the language of anticipation -- Names in profusion and confusion -- A declamatory literature -- Pt. 7: search for symbols -- Heroes or clowns? Comic supermen from a subliterature -- They mythologizing of George Washington -- How local patriotism made national heroes -- The quest for a national past -- A festival of national purpose -- Pt. 8: a spacious republic -- The imperial vagueness: from sovereignty to federalism -- The federal vagueness: born in secession -- Quests for definition: constitutions of the United States -- Unionist ways from a secessionist tradition.
520 $aHistorical survey of America's self-discovery in the years between the Revolution and the Civil War.
520 $aDaniel J. Boorstin, one of America's great historians, focuses on American ingenuity and emergent nationalism in this middle book of the Americans trilogy, dealing with a period extending roughly from the Revolution to the Civil War. Like its two companion volumes, The National Experience is a sometimes quirky look at how certain patterns of living helped shape the character of the United States. The book simply overflows with ideas, all of them introduced in entertaining chapters on subjects such as the New England ice industry and the boomtowns of the Midwest. -- from http://www.amazon.ca (March 12, 2014).
650 0 $aNational characteristics, American.
650 1 $aNational characteristics, American.
650 7 $aCivilization.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst00862898
650 7 $aNational characteristics, American.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01033342
650 7 $aAmerican national characteristics.$2sears
651 0 $aUnited States$xCivilization$y1783-1865.
651 6 $aÉtats-Unis$xHistoire$y1783-1865.$0(CaQQLa)201-0069684
651 6 $aÉtats-Unis$xVie intellectuelle$y1783-1865.$0(CaQQLa)201-0076079
651 7 $aUnited States.$2fast$0(OCoLC)fst01204155
651 7 $aUnited States$xCivilization$yTo 1783.$2nli
651 7 $aUnited States$xCivilization$y1783-1865.$2nli
648 7 $a1783-1865$2fast
710 2 $aDaniel J. Boorstin Collection (Library of Congress)$5DLC
776 08 $iOnline version:$aBoorstin, Daniel J. (Daniel Joseph), 1914-2004.$tAmericans.$dNew York, Random House [1965]$w(OCoLC)563121767
776 08 $iOnline version:$aBoorstin, Daniel J. (Daniel Joseph), 1914-2004.$tAmericans.$dNew York, Random House [1965]$w(OCoLC)607719528
938 $aBaker & Taylor$bBKTY$c35.00$d26.25$i0394414535$n0000170061$sactive
945 $aWorldCat record variable field(s) change: 505$b11/05/2021
959 $a(UICdb)27362$9LOCAL
994 $a92$bUIU