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Never before have Americans been more concerned about the moral dimensions of presidential leadership. What role should morality play in the decision making of our most powerful elected official? What did the Founders think about the significance of morality in this cherished political institution? Does the private behavior of a president influence his or her ability to lead our nation? In The Scarlet Thread of Scandal, eminent scholar Charles W. Dunn turns a penetrating eye to the history of presidential scandals to answer these and other pressing questions.
Scandals are surely nothing new in the White House-ever since the creation of the republic, presidents have made morally questionable judgments, whether constitutional, ethical, legal, or personal. In eloquent and judicious prose, Dunn chronicles the numerous controversies in presidential history, paying particular attention to their impact on the American people and public memory. The Scarlet Thread of Scandal will make all Americans think differently about past, present, and future presidents.
Published | Dec 22 1999 |
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Format | Ebook (PDF) |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 224 |
ISBN | 9798216333548 |
Imprint | Rowman & Littlefield Publishers |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Dunn's book is a serious, scholarly study of a topic that too often is treated too lightly and sensationally. If you want to understand the impact of political scandals in the United States from a historical and theoretical vantage, you must read this book.
Mark J. Rozell, George Mason University, author; The New Politics of the Old South: An Introduction to Southern Politics, Sixth Edition
Drawing on works as diverse as William J. Bennett, Robert Bellah, and Dr. Benjamin Spock, Charles Dunn charts the decline of public and presidential morality and addresses the central question of whether a president's leadership of the nation ought to outweigh questions of personal morality. Whereas American society once shared a 'common set of moral understandings,' Dunn suggests that modern views of morality have become a kaleidoscopic. The result has been indifference to personal scandal so long as job performance and, particularly, economic well being, are at high levels. The historical richness of Dunn's book provides a valuable backdrop for understanding the ever growing dichotomy between leadership and morality in America.
Phillip G. Henderson, editor of The Presidency Then and Now
If we are ever to learn from presidential scandal, we must move beyond the prurient details and the individual transgressions to come to understand them within the political, cultural, moral, religious, and ideological milieu within which they occurred. In a dispassionate and well reasoned way, Charles Dunn has performed this service for us in The Scarlet Thread of Scandal.
Gary L. Gregg II, author of The Presidential Republic
Dunn provides thoughtful generalizations on social and ideological changes and on individual leaders.
Mary Carroll, Choice Reviews
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