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California:
A Study of American Character
Josiah Royce
Introduction by Ronald A. Wells
Trade paper, 412 pages, (5.5 x 8.5)
ISBN:1-890771-52-x, $21.95
A California Legacy book
California has recently been blessed with a number of careful and colorful works by authors who do not hesitate atand perhaps even enjoyshattering the states historic icons in order to present an honest view of the states formative events and their causes. Josiah Royces California, published in 1886, is the prototype for this approach. In chronicling Californias early history, Royces intensely moral nature led him to, among other things, question and eventually debunk the glory attached to John C. Frémont and the Bear Flag Rebellion.
With keen attention to detail, Royce produced a passionate narrativeat times ironic, at times outraged, at times in awe of pioneer couragethat is admired to this day. Preferring fact to myth and optimism to despair, he sought to ground our history in truth and to reveal the moral consequences of the American conquest of Mexican California. In 1948, Robert Glass Cleland wrote, At this particular moment, when American society is in such a violent state of flux, national character so difficult to appraise, and the state undergoing such revolutionary change, the republication of Royces California is strikingly well timed.
Truer words could not be said of the 2002 edition. |
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Author Biography:
Josiah Royce (18551916), the son of forty-niners Josiah and Sarah Royce, was born and reared in Grass Valley. He studied under Joseph Le Conte and Edward Sill at the University of California, Berkeley, graduating in 1875. After spending a year in Germany and earning a Ph.D. from Johns Hopkins, he became an instructor of English at UC Berkeley (187882) and later went on to Harvard, where he remained for the rest of his life as a professor of philosophy. |