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Jeffrey Pasley

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jeffrey Lingan Pasley (born February 27, 1964) is a professor of American history at the University of Missouri, specializing in the Early Republic.

He is the oldest son of John Pasley, a former civil engineer and local public official.

Early life and education

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Pasley spent most of his childhood in Topeka, Kansas, graduating from Washburn Rural High School in 1982. He graduated from Carleton College, a liberal-arts school in Northfield, Minnesota, in 1986. After graduating, he moved to Washington, D.C., where he worked on the staff of Al Gore's attempted campaign for the Democratic presidential nomination in the 1988 election,[1] during much of 1986 and 1987. Throughout the same period, he also contributed articles for The New Republic, a liberal political commentary magazine.[1]

Academic career

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Pasley completed graduate school at Harvard University in 1993 with a Ph.D. He taught at Florida State University from 1993 to 1999 before beginning his current tenure at the University of Missouri later in 1999. Pasley's research focuses on American political culture between the American Revolution and the Civil War.[1] In addition, Pasley has taught classes on the United States during the Cold War, especially in the field of popular conspiracy theories.[2]

His 2001 book The Tyranny of Printers showed that many early professional politicians in the U.S. were newspaper printers and editors, based upon "well-crafted biographical accounts of critical figures".[3] A later work, The First Presidential Contest (2013) was described as "A superb, important book. Likely to become the definitive study of the 1796 election."[4] "The importance of this book" lay in setting the election in the wider political context of the time.[5]

In a 2015 interview with Vox Magazine (an arm of the Columbia Missourian newspaper), Pasley talked about the role of comic books in reflecting the social political climate of the time in postwar America.[6]

Bibliography

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  • "The Tyranny of Printers": Newspaper Politics in the Early American Republic (University of Virginia Press, 2001, ISBN 9780813921778)
  • Beyond the Founders: New Approaches to the Political History of the Early American Republic, co-authored with David Waldstreicher and Andrew Robertson (University of North Carolina Press, 2004, ISBN 9780807855584)
  • The First Presidential Contest: The Election of 1796 and the Founding of American Democracy (University of Kansas Press, 2013, ISBN 9780700619078)

References

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  1. ^ a b c "University of Missouri Department of History - Jeffrey L. Pasley". Archived from the original on 2015-09-22. Retrieved 2015-07-30.
  2. ^ CONSPIRACY THEORIES AND CONSPIRACIES IN AMERICAN HISTORY AND CULTURE
  3. ^ Kramer, Larry D. "Making Politics Work: New Insights into the Political Culture of the Early Republic". H-net Online. H-Law, January 2002.
  4. ^ Estes, Todd (June 2014). "Book reviews". Journal of American History. 101 (1)., quoted in "The First Presidential Contest: 1796 and the Founding of American Democracy". University Press of Kansas. Archived from the original on 5 October 2015. Retrieved 3 August 2015.
  5. ^ Banner, James M. (20 January 2014). "Act I, Scene Two". The Weekly Standard. 19 (18).[dead link]
  6. ^ Mary Hilleren, "A conversation with Jeff Pasley: An MU professor uses comics to teach American history", Vox (magazine), 28 May 2015
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