Reviews"Mit dem eBiographischen Handbuch der Rabbinere haben die Beteiligten dem deutschsprachigen Rabbinat der Moderne ein eindrucksvolles Denkmal gesetzt, das zugleich die unabdingbare Grundlage zuknftiger Forschung bilden wird. Dass es gelungen ist, das Werk zu diesem - einstweiligen - Abschluss zu bringen, verdient groYen Respekt. Es darf in keiner einschlgigen Bibliothek fehlen."Lucia Raspe in: Frankfurter Judaistische Beitrge 26/2010
Edition DescriptionRevised edition
Table Of ContentPart I: Honest Graft: Two Views. The World of George Washington Plunkitt (James S. Oslon). The Problem of the Cities Revisited (James W. Mooney) . Part II: Plunkitt of Tammany Hall. Preface (William L. Riordon). A Tribute (Charles F. Murphy). Honest Graft and Dishonest Graft. How to Become a Statesman. The Curse of Civil Service Reform. Reformers Only Mornin' Glories. New York City Is Pie for the Hayseeds. To Hold Your District: Study Human Nature and Act Accordin'. On The Shame of the Cities . Ingratitude in Politics. Reciprocity in Patronage. Brooklynites Natural-Born Hayseeds. Tammany Leaders Not Bookworms. Dangers of the Dress Suit in Politics. On Municipal Ownership. Tammany the Only Lastin' Democracy. Concerning Gas in Politics. Plunkitt's Fondest Dream. Tammany's Patriotism. On the Use of Money in Politics. The Successful Politician Does not Drink. Bosses Preserve the Nation. Concerning Excise. A Parting Word on the Future of the Democratic Party in America. Strenuous Life of the Tammany District Leader.
SynopsisWilliam L. Riordon's compiling and embroidering of Boss Plunkitt's boastful comments on machine politics constitutes a minor classic in American social history. in an introduction to this edition of the political boss's remarks, James S. Olson, chairman of the history department at Sam Houston State University, and James W. Mooney of American University engage in a provocative exchange over how the boss mentality as Plunkitt expressed it is to be judged. Thereby they complicate and enrich a reader's perception of the practical devices and ethical ambiguities of popular politics. "Tammany Hall was far more than a disinterested detached city government for several million poor, working-class New Yorkers. It was also a successful city government delivering municipal services, a social welfare agency assisting the immigrant poor and their children in adjusting to the new country, a political interest group giving working-class people at least a modest voice in an economic world increasingly dominated by rich corporations." --James S. Olson "In essence: the machine politicos, for all their genuine resonance with their constituencies, saw the average voter as a creature of appetite; the scientific progressives, for all their hauteur, expected something better of the public and were prepared to work for it." --James W. Mooney, William L. Riordons compiling and embroidering of Boss Plunkitts boastful comments on machine politics constitutes a minor classic in American social history. in an introduction to this edition of the political bosss remarks, James S. Olson, chairman of the history department at Sam Houston State University, and James W., William L. Riordons compiling and embroidering of Boss Plunkitts boastful comments on machine politics constitutes a minor classic in American social history. in an introduction to this edition of the political bosss remarks, James S. Olson, chairman of the history department at Sam Houston State University, and James W. Mooney of American University engage in a provocative exchange over how the boss mentality as Plunkitt expressed it is to be judged. Thereby they complicate and enrich a readers perception of the practical devices and ethical ambiguities of popular politics. "Tammany Hall was far more than a disinterested detached city government for several million poor, working-class New Yorkers. It was also a successful city government delivering municipal services, a social welfare agency assisting the immigrant poor and their children in adjusting to the new country, a political interest group giving working-class people at least a modest voice in an economic world increasingly dominated by rich corporations." --James S. Olson "In essence: the machine politicos, for all their genuine resonance with their constituencies, saw the average voter as a creature of appetite; the scientific progressives, for all their hauteur, expected something better of the public and were prepared to work for it." --James W. Mooney