With reverence and contempt : how Americans think about their president
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
With reverence and contempt : how Americans think about their president
(Interpreting American politics)
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1997
- :pbk ed.
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Note
Includes bibliographical references (p. [145]-170) and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
What's wrong with the American presidency? Why is the world's oldest surviving democracy headed by a leader who lives and acts like a king? And why is that same leader so often held in low esteem by those who elected him? In this survey of presidential history, the author examines two centuries of unrealistic expectations, false hopes and willful misunderstandings that lie at the heart of America's "dysfunctional relationship" with its president. Langston argues that each president becomes an icon, a stylized image of Americans' faith in themselves and in their country. Providing an investigation of how the game of presidential symbol-making is played, the author reveals how Americans' wishful thinking is encouraged and how even the best presidents are invited to deceive the public. The work concludes with a series of recommendations, including legislative changes aimed at improving the relationship between the president and the public by cutting the president's symbolic value down to size.
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