Front cover image for Daniel Webster and the oratory of civil religion

Daniel Webster and the oratory of civil religion

Annotation Daniel Webster (1782-1852) embodied the golden age of oratory in America by mastering each of the major genres of public speaking of the time. Even today, many of his victories before the Supreme Court remain as precedents. Webster served in the House, the Senate, and twice as secretary of state. He was so famous as a political orator that his reply "Liberty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparable!" to Senator Robert Hayne in a debate in 1830 was memorized by schoolboys and was on the lips of Northern soldiers as they charged forward in the Civil War. There would have been no 1850 Compromise without Webster, and without the Compromise, the Civil War might well have come earlier to an unprepared North. Webster was also the consummate ceremonial speaker. He advanced Whig virtues and solidified support for the Union through civil religion, creating a transcendent symbol for the nation that became a metaphor for the working constitutional framework. While several biographies have been written about Webster, none has focused on his oratorical talent. This study examines Webster's incredible career from the perspective of his great speeches and how they created a civil religion that moved citizens beyond loyalty and civic virtue to true romantic patriotism. Craig R. Smith places Webster's speeches in their historical context and then uses the tools of rhetorical criticism to analyze them. He demonstrates that Webster understood not only how rhetorical genres function to meet the expectations of the moment but also how they could be braided to produce long-lasting and literate discourse
eBook, English, ©2005
University of Missouri Press, Columbia, ©2005
Biographies
1 online resource (300 pages) : illustrations
9780826264299, 9780826215420, 0826264298, 0826215424
61395479
The foundation of Webster's civil religion
A Boston lawyer
The lion returns
Civic duty in the romantic age
Liberty and union
Legal and partisan wrangling
Abolition confounds the two-party system
Secretary Webster
War with Mexico
National crisis, Capitol gridlock
Consummating compromise
Twilight time
Electronic reproduction, [Place of publication not identified], HathiTrust Digital Library, 2010
English
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