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The Rhetoric of the "Corrupt Bargain" in the 1824 Election

Clay, Jackson, and Democratic Strategy

Amos Kiewe

In The Rhetoric of the “Corrupt Bargain” in the 1824 Election: Clay, Jackson, and Democratic Strategy, Amos Kiewe explores the story of the 1824 presidential election, when the House of Representatives elected the president after no candidate won outright the majority of the Electoral College. Though most in the nation assumed that Andrew Jackson, who won the popular vote and the plurality of the Electoral College, would be elected the presidency by the House, Kiewe demonstrates how maneuvering, vote trading, and special favors dictated a different outcome. Through inspecting speeches, statements, private letters, and published accounts, Kiewe simultaneously intersects rhetoric, history, and politics to tell the story of the 1824 presidential election. Scholars of communication, political science, and history will find this book of particular interest.

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Lexington Books
Pages: 220 • Trim: 6¼ x 9½
978-1-66692-531-9 • Hardback • September 2022 • $100.00 • (£77.00)
Subjects: Language Arts & Disciplines / Rhetoric, Political Science / Political Process / Campaigns & Elections, Political Science / American Government / National

Amos Kiewe is is professor of communication and rhetorical studies at Syracuse University. He is the author of numerous books on presidential rhetoric.

Table of Contents

Foreword

Introduction

Chapter One: The Candidates

Chapter Two: Jackson For President

Chapter Three: Clay For President

Chapter Four: The Election Is Not Over

Chapter Five: A “Military Chieftain”

Chapter Six: Clay Speaks To His District

Chapter Seven: Post-Election

Chapter Eight: The Presidential Campaign Is Underway, Again

Chapter Nine: Enters James Buchanan

Chapter Ten: Markley Comes Forward

Chapter Eleven: The Charge That Would Not Die

Epilogue

Afterthought

Bibliography

About the Author

“Kiewe’s study of the 1824 election involving Jackson and Clay offers vastly more than a detailed history of unliving proceedings or facts along a rapidly moving historical timeline. Rather, his micro-analysis of the language used during the campaigns, deployed throughout the debates, offered sotto voce in backroom chambers, and revealed through other public venues adds to the contour of not just rhetorical invention of the time, but also of discursive style. Kiewe offers readers a close-textual glimpse into one of our nation’s first truly tumultuous and uncertain electoral moments.”


— Jason Edward Black, University of North Carolina at Charlotte


"The Rhetoric of the “Corrupt Bargain” in the 1824 Election is a superb rhetorical history, and Kiewe offers a meticulous accounting of the election of 1824, both in state voting patterns and the tense negotiations in the House of Representatives. Kiewe offers a lucid picture of the bargain between Clay and Adams, developing a compelling argument that there is at least as much fire as smoke to the charge of a corrupt bargain. 1824, 1828, and the interlocutors who contested them have long been overlooked by rhetorical studies. This book proves convincingly that there is much we can learn here—much that is increasingly relevant in modern democratic life."


— Donovan Bisbee, Baruch College


"The Corrupt Bargain is a must read for scholars, students and those interested in the life and political career of Andrew Jackson and the political drama of the 1824 presidential election. This insightful and informative study reveals the rhetorical strategies, underhanded practices, intrigue and party negotiations of Henry Clay, Andrew Jackson and John Quincy Adams. The 1824 election changed future presidential campaigns and the polity itself."


— Robert Denton, Virginia Tech


The Rhetoric of the "Corrupt Bargain" in the 1824 Election

Clay, Jackson, and Democratic Strategy

Cover Image
Hardback
Summary
Summary
  • In The Rhetoric of the “Corrupt Bargain” in the 1824 Election: Clay, Jackson, and Democratic Strategy, Amos Kiewe explores the story of the 1824 presidential election, when the House of Representatives elected the president after no candidate won outright the majority of the Electoral College. Though most in the nation assumed that Andrew Jackson, who won the popular vote and the plurality of the Electoral College, would be elected the presidency by the House, Kiewe demonstrates how maneuvering, vote trading, and special favors dictated a different outcome. Through inspecting speeches, statements, private letters, and published accounts, Kiewe simultaneously intersects rhetoric, history, and politics to tell the story of the 1824 presidential election. Scholars of communication, political science, and history will find this book of particular interest.

Details
Details
  • Lexington Books
    Pages: 220 • Trim: 6¼ x 9½
    978-1-66692-531-9 • Hardback • September 2022 • $100.00 • (£77.00)
    Subjects: Language Arts & Disciplines / Rhetoric, Political Science / Political Process / Campaigns & Elections, Political Science / American Government / National
Author
Author
  • Amos Kiewe is is professor of communication and rhetorical studies at Syracuse University. He is the author of numerous books on presidential rhetoric.

Table of Contents
Table of Contents
  • Table of Contents

    Foreword

    Introduction

    Chapter One: The Candidates

    Chapter Two: Jackson For President

    Chapter Three: Clay For President

    Chapter Four: The Election Is Not Over

    Chapter Five: A “Military Chieftain”

    Chapter Six: Clay Speaks To His District

    Chapter Seven: Post-Election

    Chapter Eight: The Presidential Campaign Is Underway, Again

    Chapter Nine: Enters James Buchanan

    Chapter Ten: Markley Comes Forward

    Chapter Eleven: The Charge That Would Not Die

    Epilogue

    Afterthought

    Bibliography

    About the Author

Reviews
Reviews
  • “Kiewe’s study of the 1824 election involving Jackson and Clay offers vastly more than a detailed history of unliving proceedings or facts along a rapidly moving historical timeline. Rather, his micro-analysis of the language used during the campaigns, deployed throughout the debates, offered sotto voce in backroom chambers, and revealed through other public venues adds to the contour of not just rhetorical invention of the time, but also of discursive style. Kiewe offers readers a close-textual glimpse into one of our nation’s first truly tumultuous and uncertain electoral moments.”


    — Jason Edward Black, University of North Carolina at Charlotte


    "The Rhetoric of the “Corrupt Bargain” in the 1824 Election is a superb rhetorical history, and Kiewe offers a meticulous accounting of the election of 1824, both in state voting patterns and the tense negotiations in the House of Representatives. Kiewe offers a lucid picture of the bargain between Clay and Adams, developing a compelling argument that there is at least as much fire as smoke to the charge of a corrupt bargain. 1824, 1828, and the interlocutors who contested them have long been overlooked by rhetorical studies. This book proves convincingly that there is much we can learn here—much that is increasingly relevant in modern democratic life."


    — Donovan Bisbee, Baruch College


    "The Corrupt Bargain is a must read for scholars, students and those interested in the life and political career of Andrew Jackson and the political drama of the 1824 presidential election. This insightful and informative study reveals the rhetorical strategies, underhanded practices, intrigue and party negotiations of Henry Clay, Andrew Jackson and John Quincy Adams. The 1824 election changed future presidential campaigns and the polity itself."


    — Robert Denton, Virginia Tech


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