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Need an argumentative essay on Historical Novel: Burr. Needs to be 6 pages. Please no plagiarism.Download file to see previous pages... d to face charges of treason but was in the end acquitted by the

Need an argumentative essay on Historical Novel: Burr. Needs to be 6 pages. Please no plagiarism.

Download file to see previous pages...

d to face charges of treason but was in the end acquitted by the country’s chief justice who was Jefferson’s rival. in humiliation, he escaped his country for many decades and finally returned a disgraceful and insignificant aged man (Wood 1984). In American prose, Aaron Burr is the most idealized and denigrated historical icon. Numerous poems, lyrics, lectures, fictional life stories, plays and novels have patronized Burr’s legend. However, beyond all wasted literature and exaggerated imaginative ploys, serious historians avoided his sensationalized fiction and romance. What kept them distant were the scarce, discrete and scattered documentations of Burr’s political career and memoirs. ...

s two-volume printed information was the first introduction of Burr’s life in American history and an illumination of his unexciting, ordinary daily events in politics and business that collectively construct a different depiction of Burr — an ordinary politician (Wood 1984). For several years, Aaron Burr has been unjustly vilified by scholars. his accomplishments disregarded and deficiencies emphasized while justifying others, particularly his contemporaries, Alexander Hamilton and Thomas Jefferson. Indisputably a disappointment to some and notoriously famous to many, Burr, being a man of great character, his part in American history was bigger than the recognition he received. History should never forget Burr's solid dedication of ending slavery and his serious support for feminism (Kennedy 2000). The novel is packed with accurate historical detail taken from authentic historical records. In the afterword, the author admitted his use of only two fictional characters, namely, Charlie Schuyler (the narrator), "based roughly on the obscure novelist Charles Burdett," and William de la Touche Clancey, a "Tory sodomite" with a tongue that "darts in and out of his mouth like a lizard's catching flies," who Vidal swears to his readers, "could, obviously, be based on no one at all." The others are real iconoclastic historical characters in the novel who appear not to be "in the right places, on the right dates, doing what they actually did." The character’s dialogues are taken from actual correspondence and genuine documents (Lehmann- Haupt 1973). However, the novel despite its historical truthfulness is politically untrue.

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