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The Pursuit of Happiness
Family and Values in Jefferson's Virginia

Jan Lewis (Author)

9780521315081, Cambridge University Press

Paperback, published 22 February 1985

312 pages
21.6 x 13.8 x 1.9 cm, 0.416 kg

This is an unusual and challenging study of the 'inner world' of the Virginia gentry during Jefferson's lifetime. It argues that, in the years after the Revolution, the gentry turned away from public life into the privacy of their homes and families. A new, sentimental religion agreed that the world was filled with woe and advised detachment from it in preparation for a better one to come. Notions of success, likewise, offered little cheer, as men and women reluctantly accepted the individualistic proposition that their destinies were in their own hands. Neither religion nor success assured earthly happiness; instead, Virginians sought their salvation in love. There, in the family and in feeling, men and women broke through the eighteenth-century's emotional restraint to pursue, but not always to find, the happiness they believed awaited them.

List of plates
Preface
Acknowledgments
1. 'My peaceable scheme': the world of the pre-Revolutionary gentry
2. 'The real use of religion': religion
3. 'Weep for yourselves': death
4. 'Little ambitions': success
5. 'Earthly connexions': love
6. 'The best feelings of our nature': conclusion
List of abbreviations used in notes
Notes
Bibliographical essay
A note on the sources
Selected bibliography
Index.

Subject Areas: History of the Americas [HBJK]

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