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Federalists & Republicans: The New American Nation, 1775-1820 Series

Editat de Peter S. Onuf
en Limba Engleză Hardback – aug 1991
This series includes a representative selection of the most interesting and influential journal articles on revolutionary and early national America. The essays in these volumes show that the revolutionary era was an extraordinarily complex “moment” when the broad outlines of national history first emerged. Yet if the “common cause” brought Americans together, it also drove them apart: the Revolution, historians agree, was as much a civil war as a war of national liberation. And, given the distinctive colonial histories of the original members of the American Union, it is not surprising that the war had profoundly different effects in different parts of the country. This series has been designed to reveal the multiplicity of these experiences in a period of radical political and social change.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780815304432
ISBN-10: 0815304439
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Seria The New American Nation, 1775-1820 Series

Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Cuprins

Marshall Smelser, “The Federalist Period as an Age of Passion,” American Quarterly, 1958, 10(4):391-419., John R. Howe, Jr., “Republican Thought and the Political Violence of the 1790s,” American Quarterly, 1967, 19 (2, Part 1): 147—165., Michael Lienesch, “The Role of Political Millennialism in Early American Nationalism,” Western Political Quarterly, 1983, 36(3):445-465., Wallace Evan Davies, “The Society of the Cincinnati in New England 1783-1800,” William and Mary Quarterly, 1948, 5(1): 3-25., Gary B. Nash, “The American Clergy and the French Revolution,” William and Mary Quarterly, 1965, 22(3): 392-412., Charles Ellis Dickson, “Jeremiads in the New American Republic: The Case of National Fasts in the John Adams Administration,” New England Quarterly, 1987, 60(2): 187-207., William Stinchcombe, “The Diplomacy of the WXYZ Affair,” William and Mary Quarterly, 1977, 34(4):590-617., Jean S. Holder, “The Sources of Presidential Power: John Adams and the Challenge of Executive Primacy,” Political Science Quarterly, 1986-87, 101 (4):601-616., Michael Durey, “Thomas Paine’s Apostles: Radical Emigres and the Triumph of Jeffersonian Republicanism,” William and Mary Quarterly, 1987, 44(4):661-688., Joyce Appleby, “Commercial Farming and the ‘Agrarian Myth’ in the Early Republic,” Journal of American History, 1982, 68(4):833-849., Joyce Appleby, “What Is Still American in the Political Philosophy of Thomas Jefferson?” William and Mary Quarterly, 1982, 39(2)(Third Series):287-309., John Ashworth, “The Jeffersonians: Classical Republicans or Liberal Capitalists?” Journal of American Studies, 1984, 18(3): 425-435., Joseph H. Harrison, Jr., “S/c Et Non: Thomas Jefferson and Internal Improvement,” Journal of the Early Republic, 1987, 7:335-349., John Lauritz Larson, ‘“Bind the Republic Together’: The National Union and the Struggle for a System of Internal Improvements,” Journal of American History, 1987, 74(2):363-387., Theodore Joseph Crackel, “The Founding of West Point: Jefferson and the Politics of Security,” Armed Forces and Society, 1981, 7(4):529-543., Robert R. Davis, Jr., “Pell-Mell: Jeffersonian Etiquette and Protocol,” Historian, 1981, 43(4):509-529., Constance B. Schulz, ‘“Of Bigotry in Politics and Religion’: Jefferson’s Religion, the Federalist Press, and the Syllabus,” Virginia Magazine of History and Biography, 1983, 91(1): 73-91., Duncan MacLeod, “The Political Economy of John Taylor of Caroline,” Journal of American Studies, 1980, 14(3):387-405.

Notă biografică

Peter S Onuf, University of Virginia, USA.

Descriere

This series includes a representative selection of the most interesting and influential journal articles on revolutionary and early national America. The essays in these volumes show that the revolutionary era was an extraordinarily complex “moment” when the broad outlines of national history first emerged.