Ida Tarbell: Portrait of a Muckraker

Ida Tarbell: Portrait of a Muckraker

by Kathleen Brady
Ida Tarbell: Portrait of a Muckraker

Ida Tarbell: Portrait of a Muckraker

by Kathleen Brady

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Overview

In this first definitive biography of Ida Tarbell, Kathleen Brady, who is on the staff of Time, has written a readable and widely acclaimed book about one of America's great journalists.Ida Tarbell's generation called her "a muckraker" (the term was Theodore Roosevelt's, and he didn't intend it as a compliment), but in our time she would have been known as "an investigative reporter," with the celebrity of Woodward and Bernstein. By any description, Ida Tarbell was one of the most powerful women of her time in the United States: admired, feared, hated. When her History of the Standard Oil Company was published, first in McClure's Magazine and then as a book (1904), it shook the Rockefeller interests, caused national outrage, and led the Supreme Court to fragment the giant monopoly.A journalist of extraordinary intelligence, accuracy, and courage, she was also the author of the influential and popular books on Napoleon and Abraham Lincoln, and her hundreds of articles dealt with public figures such as Louis Pateur and Emile Zola, and contemporary issues such as tariff policy and labor. During her long life, she knew Teddy Roosevelt, Jane Addams, Henry James, Samuel McClure, Lincoln Stephens, Herbert Hoover, and many other prominent Americans. She achieved more than almost any woman of her generation, but she was an antisuffragist, believing that the traditional roles of wife and mother were more important than public life. She ultimately defended the business interests she had once attacked.To this day, her opposition to women's rights disturbs some feminists. Kathleen Brady writes of her: "[She did not have] the flinty stuff of which the cutting edge of any revolution is made. . . . Yet she was called to achievement in a day when women were called only to exist. Her triumph was that she succeeded. Her tragedy ws that she was never to know it."

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780822980162
Publisher: University of Pittsburgh Press
Publication date: 10/15/1989
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 296
File size: 3 MB

Table of Contents

CONTENTS
Foreword
I BEGINNINGS
1 An Unaccommodating Child
2 Pantheistic Evolutionist
3 A Young Lady of Fine Literary Mind
II EXALTATION
4 Une Femme Travailleuse
5 The French Salon
III SUCCESS
6 The Americanization of Ida Tarbell
7 The Lady of Muckrake
8 Unexplored Land
9 A Second Crusade
10 A Bad Woman
IV VALOR
11 Workhorse
12 At Rest
Acknowledgments
Notes
Bibliography
Index
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