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Empire of Skulls - by Paul Stob Hardcover
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Highlights
- An absorbing tale of science and showmanship, ideology and enterprise, that provides not just a fascinating history of our country, but also crucial insight into the deep currents that continue to propel modern life During the contentious and progressive antebellum era, the Fowler family preached a gospel of self-improvement to a nation eager to embrace its foundational beliefs.
- About the Author: PAUL STOB is Director of the Program in American Studies at Vanderbilt University, where he also teaches in the Department of Communication Studies and the Program in the Communication of Science and Technology.
- 336 Pages
- History, Modern
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Book Synopsis
An absorbing tale of science and showmanship, ideology and enterprise, that provides not just a fascinating history of our country, but also crucial insight into the deep currents that continue to propel modern life
During the contentious and progressive antebellum era, the Fowler family preached a gospel of self-improvement to a nation eager to embrace its foundational beliefs. For the first time, this new "science" of phrenology offered all Americans the ability to improve their station by unlocking their innate mental and emotional truths. Revered politicians, quirky celebrities, infamous criminals, and social outcasts all found their way to the Fowlers for skull readings.
Brimming with the energy to change the world, the Fowlers connected phrenology to practically every aspect of life in the young nation--from abolition to women's rights, temperance to prison reform, spiritualism and mesmerism to vegetarianism and sexual education. But there was a dark side to this fad and to the Fowlers, and soon nefarious forces co-opted this once-hopeful sensation to justify racism and xenophobia.
Phrenology's complex history stands as a commentary on the dreams and follies of the American republic. Though phrenology (and the Fowlers) ran afoul of the tide of history, its aspirational insistence on an individual's ability to improve oneself became embedded in the fabric of the nation.
Review Quotes
"Stob, a professor of communication at Vanderbilt University, casts a spell with his humorous, witty storytelling and cinematic descriptions of a bygone era . . . A fascinating tale of a nation gripped and shaped by a science/health fad that resonates today." --Kirkus Reviews
"In this original and compelling book, Paul Stob sheds light on a forgotten but vital moment in American life. Absorbing, eloquent, and insightful, Empire of Skulls is nonfiction at its best, an indelible tale that surprises, entertains, and instructs." --Jon Meacham, author of The Call to Serve: The Life of an American President, George Herbert Walker Bush
"With vivid characters and propulsive storytelling, Empire of Skulls reveals how phrenology became entangled with the era's most urgent questions about human nature, social reform, and American destiny. The Fowlers' saga--by turns inspiring, troubling, and darkly comical--shows us a young nation desperate to understand itself, willing to believe that the secrets of human potential lay just beneath the surface of the skin. Paul Stob has created a masterful blend of biography, cultural history, and scientific detective story." --Michael Bess, author of Our Grandchildren Redesigned: Life in the Bioengineered Society of the Near Future
"Empire of Skulls is a riveting account of how one entrepreneurial family mastered the business of science nearly two centuries before today's wellness craze. Full of warmth and wit, Paul Stob's brilliant storytelling puts our hands on the bumps and creases of the nineteenth-century American mind." --Daniel J. Sharfstein, author of Thunder in the Mountains: Chief Joseph, Oliver Otis Howard, and the Nez Perce War
About the Author
PAUL STOB is Director of the Program in American Studies at Vanderbilt University, where he also teaches in the Department of Communication Studies and the Program in the Communication of Science and Technology. His research and teaching focus on American intellectual culture in the nineteenth century, with an emphasis on the connection between reading, writing, and lecturing as well as religion, democracy, populism, and social movements. He is co-author (with Stephen Lucas) of The Art of Public Speaking (McGraw-Hill), which is now in its fourteenth edition and sells well over 100K copies a year in various print and electronic editions. Empire of Skulls is his first trade book.