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| Book Review | The American Historical Review, 111.4 | The History Cooperative
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October, 2006
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Book Review

Canada and the United States



Jerry Weinberger. Benjamin Franklin Unmasked: On the Unity of His Moral, Religious, and Political Thought. (American Political Thought.) Lawrence: University Press of Kansas. 2005. Pp. xvi, 336. $34.95.

Historians may have mixed feelings after reading Jerry Weinberger's book. A highly versatile and accomplished person, Benjamin Franklin had a long and colorful life, not to mention that the self-portrait in the several hundred editions of his Autobiography (1791) has for the last two centuries obscured his historical identity. Reacting to a lovable image of a quintessentially self-made man, the effort to unmask him began at least more than a century ago when Paul Leicester Ford wrote The Many-Sided Franklin (1899). Since then the search for the "true," the "real," the "not-so-simple," the "elusive," the "complicated," the "hidden," and the "devious" Franklin has consumed the energies of not a few scholars and popular writers. Weinberger joined this crusade from a different angle. Contrary to those who took Franklin's humor at face value, Weinberger believed that some of his subject's most serious thought could be found in those seemingly not so serious writings. Indeed, the more hilarious Franklin's comic essays were, the deeper and more profound his philosophy might turn out to be, according to Weinberger. Thus, his quest for the "true" and "real" Franklin was based not on any new evidence that he discovered but on his reinterpretation of several commonly known pieces by Franklin. . . .

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