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Reconsidering JFK

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The John F. Kennedy presidency has an indelible hold on our imaginations. Even more than half a century later, we remain captivated by the charismatic young leader who promised us the moon, who remained steadfast in the face of nuclear catastrophe, who told us to “ask not what your country can do for you, but what you can do for your country”—and whose life was cut short by shocking assassination.

Although so much ink has been spilled about JFK, recent years have seen the public release of documents and interviews, shedding new light on a man who perhaps never fully revealed himself to anyone: the courageous soldier, the political neophyte, the stylish leader, the casual playboy. Who was JFK? And what do we know about his presidency?

Reconsidering JFK is your chance to transport yourself back to a more innocent time in America, to a presidency mythologized as “Camelot.” In these 12 in-depth lectures, Professor Michael Shelden of Indiana State University brings you the latest research and first-hand accounts to portray a fresh angle on a multi-faceted, always fascinating American president.

Here, consider the story through the eyes of people who experienced it. For instance, it is difficult to reflect on Kennedy’s assassination in Dallas without thinking about Lee Harvey Oswald and conspiracy theories of the grassy knoll. But when you look at that fateful day through the eyes of those who lived it, you will discover that political tensions in Texas were the most dominant concern. Professor Shelden shows you grumpy Lyndon Johnson, forced to go on a reconciliation tour, bickering with colleagues until the shots were fired.

Historians traffic in drama—the turning points that change the world forever. JFK’s presidency certainly was a turning point, but what remains so compelling is the human drama behind events such as the Bay of Pigs or the Cuban Missile Crisis. Reconsidering JFK is a story of the human drama—and the heart of the intriguing leader who changed the world.

6 pages, Audible Audio

Published July 15, 2022

About the author

Michael Shelden

27 books14 followers

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Profile Image for Andrew Smith.
1,155 reviews770 followers
June 9, 2024
Like many people interested in American history, JFK and Bobby Kennedy have created a particular point of interest for me. I’ve already read a number of books focused on the life and actions of this pair:

RARE AN UNFINISHED LIFE by Robert Dallek - 1st/1st HCDJ 2003 - Kennedy JFK - fine

Robert Kennedy: His Life

One Minute to Midnight: Kennedy, Khrushchev and Castro on the Brink of Nuclear War

But I’ve also enjoyed a quite a few of Audible’s Great Courses, and when I spotted this one on offer as a freebie I concluded that another commentary on JFK’s short presidency would be a good way to keep me company during around 6 hours of dog walking time.

The lectures are written and delivered by Michael Sheldon, a Pulitzer Prize finalist who has written six biographies and, for ten years, was a feature writer for the London Daily Telegraph. His aim here is to take a balanced look at JFK’s presidency by examining both its successes and failures. Much of the input comes from a rich archive of eyewitness accounts from people who saw him up close as both a candidate and as a president. A good deal of this material has been drawn from a library of oral histories at the John F. Kennedy Presidential Library and Museum in Boston.

We’re walked through a brief family history, followed by his route to the presidency (the first Catholic to achieve this status, of course). Then there’s quite a bit of focus on his private life: he was, as been widely reported, a serial womaniser. The remainder takes a look at the big issues he was required to deal with in his time in office, which amounted to a little less than three years. His major challenges included: his health (he struggled throughout his life with issues connect to Addison’s disease); the Bay of Pigs fiasco (very soon after he gained office); the Cuban Missile Crisis (which arrived not long after he’d been bullied in his first meeting with Khrushchev); his pledge to reach the Moon by the end of the decade (this was subsequently achieved after his death, in July 1969); the civil rights battle (legislation with eventually be pushed through by Kennedy’s successor, Lyndon Johnson, some eight months after Kennedy’s assassination); Vietnam (there were just 685 military advisers in country at the start of his administration, but this had increased to more than 16000 by the time of his death). His assassination is covered, but only really in a political context.

Kennedy’s presidency it might not have been the longest, but it was certainly a busy one.

The author concludes that on the plus side are: JFK’s youthful ambition, energy, and his willingness to address the racial divide in America. In addition, there are his grand visions for scientific and technological changes together with his success at resisting American involvement in a major war (with the Soviet Union).But he admits that Kennedy divides opinion. There are many who can’t hear anything negative about the man but also a lot who can’t say anything positive. Either way, he says, he changed the way Americans look at the office itself. He was truly the first modern president.

Overall, I found it to be another useful and interesting look at one of the most fascinating men of the 20th century.
Profile Image for Dennis Murphy.
849 reviews12 followers
October 30, 2023
Reconsidering JFK by Michael Shelden is a perfectly fine survey of JFK, but it is mostly limited by its own format. How does one cram into six hours or so something that covers the gamut of the rise of JFK, the Bay of Pigs Invasion, the Contention with Khrushchev in the Cuban Missile Crisis, the Apollo program, Vietnam, his assassination, and the myth of Camelot? You treat them all briefly before moving on. There's no real time to wrestle with JFK. We're supposed to reconsider his presidency here, but it is not all too clear what it is we are supposed to have considered before. With little time to breathe and ruminate on things, the lessons Shelden wishes to impart are provided to us often ten to twenty minutes after the subject is initially raised. What we are left with is a survey that is "fine" in every sense of the word, but not something that can aspire to be a course that will be remembered in the long run. At this stage, it is a teaser for something more, an abridged account of one of US history's favorite modern sons, rather than being a full articulation of the man and his presidency.

But that is to fight against the format. The Great Courses seems to be pushing shorter and shorter fare these days, and I'm not all that happy about it. As such, most of my criticisms may simply have been unavoidable for Shelden.
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