The Rise of American Democracy: Jefferson to LincolnW.W. Norton & Company, 2009 - 496 pages Acclaimed as the definitive study of the period by one of the greatest American historians, The Rise of American Democracy traces a historical arc from the earliest days of the republic to the opening shots of the Civil War. Ferocious clashes among the Founders over the role of ordinary citizens in a government of "we, the people" were eventually resolved in the triumph of Andrew Jackson. Thereafter, Sean Wilentz shows, a fateful division arose between two starkly opposed democracies--a division contained until the election of Abraham Lincoln sparked its bloody resolution. Winner of the Bancroft Award, shortlisted for the Pulitzer Prize, finalist for the Los Angeles Times Book Prize, a New York Times 100 Notable Books of 2005 and best book of New York magazine and The Economist. |
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Page 145
... political power , very dif- ferent from the main forms of democratic politics that had emerged since the Revolution . The full meaning of those efforts would become clear only when new coalitions in secular politics displaced the disar ...
... political power , very dif- ferent from the main forms of democratic politics that had emerged since the Revolution . The full meaning of those efforts would become clear only when new coalitions in secular politics displaced the disar ...
Page 265
... political havoc and destroy the Democracy . In all these cases and others , political abuses formed the matrix of oppression . Accordingly , the cure was political as well — above all , promulgating the central Jacksonian principle that ...
... political havoc and destroy the Democracy . In all these cases and others , political abuses formed the matrix of oppression . Accordingly , the cure was political as well — above all , promulgating the central Jacksonian principle that ...
Page 413
... political interests as well as ambitions - and pushed him into the Republican Party . He had gained a certain stat- ure in 1854 when he graciously gave way to Lyman Trumbull in the state legislature's selection of Illinois's junior U.S. ...
... political interests as well as ambitions - and pushed him into the Republican Party . He had gained a certain stat- ure in 1854 when he graciously gave way to Lyman Trumbull in the state legislature's selection of Illinois's junior U.S. ...
Contents
American Democracy in a Revolutionary | 3 |
The Republican Interest and the SelfCreated Democracy | 17 |
The Making of Jeffersonian Democracy | 31 |
Copyright | |
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