The Gettysburg Address

Perspectives on Lincoln's Greatest Speech

Contributors

Edited by Sean Conant

Read by Dermot Mulroney

Read by Edoardo Ballerini

Read by David Pittu

Read by Stephen Lang

Read by Graeme Malcolm

Read by Suzanne Toren

Read by Jonathan Davis

Read by Neal McDonough

Read by Jennifer Van Dyck

Read by Robin Miles

Read by Peter Ganim

Read by Ellen Archer

Read by Zachary Gordon

Read by John Keating

Formats and Prices

Price

$35.00

Price

$39.00 CAD

Format

Format:

  1. Audiobook CD (Unabridged) $35.00 $39.00 CAD
  2. Audiobook Download (Unabridged)

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It remains without question the most memorable and memorized speech in American history. On November 19, 1863, in 272 words delivered among the freshly dug graves of Union dead upon the country’s bloodiest battlefield, Abraham Lincoln redefined American liberty and forever altered the course of the nation.

This volume aims to place the Gettysburg Address in its full context, examining both its influences and impacts, and approaching it from a number of modern perspectives. Never before in one anthology has Lincoln’s immortal address been viewed through such far-reaching lenses as emancipation, women’s rights, immigrant rights, LGBT rights, and more. The scholarship included in this audiobook is new and exciting, with each of its 15 essays providing further meditation on major themes in the evolution of freedom and equality in America.

Edited by filmmaker Sean Conant and with contributions from some of the country’s leading scholars including Sean Wilentz, Craig L. Symonds, and Harold Holzer, this volume explores how in the century and a half since it was delivered, the Gettysburg Address has proven a seemingly inexhaustible source of somber reflection and soaring hope, and why its language continues to resonate with so many people seeking meaning for their own struggles and sacrifices.

On Sale
Jun 30, 2015
Publisher
Hachette Audio
ISBN-13
9781478907848