Patrick Henry-Onslow Debate: Liberty and Republicanism in American Political Thought
Editat de H. Lee Cheek Jr., Sean R. Busick, Carey M. Robertsen Limba Engleză Hardback – 26 sep 2013
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780739120781
ISBN-10: 0739120786
Pagini: 112
Ilustrații: 2 BW Illustrations
Dimensiuni: 157 x 238 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0739120786
Pagini: 112
Ilustrații: 2 BW Illustrations
Dimensiuni: 157 x 238 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.34 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Lexington Books
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Cuprins
Acknowledgments
Introduction: H. Lee Cheek, Jr., Sean R. Busick, and Carey Roberts
1. "Patrick Henry" I, 1 May 1826
2. "Onslow" I, 20 May 1826
3. "Patrick Henry" II, 7 June 1826
4. "Onslow" II, 27 June 1826
5. "Onslow" III, 29 June 1826
6. "Patrick Henry" III, 4 August 1826
7. "Patrick Henry" IV, 5 August 1826
8. "Patrick Henry" V, 8 August 1826
9. "Onslow" IV, 7 October 1826
10. "Onslow" V, 10 October 1826
11. "Onslow" VI, 12 October 1826
Appendix I: Catlett Letter
Appendix II: Transcript of Catlett Letter
Selected Bibliography
About the Editors
Introduction: H. Lee Cheek, Jr., Sean R. Busick, and Carey Roberts
1. "Patrick Henry" I, 1 May 1826
2. "Onslow" I, 20 May 1826
3. "Patrick Henry" II, 7 June 1826
4. "Onslow" II, 27 June 1826
5. "Onslow" III, 29 June 1826
6. "Patrick Henry" III, 4 August 1826
7. "Patrick Henry" IV, 5 August 1826
8. "Patrick Henry" V, 8 August 1826
9. "Onslow" IV, 7 October 1826
10. "Onslow" V, 10 October 1826
11. "Onslow" VI, 12 October 1826
Appendix I: Catlett Letter
Appendix II: Transcript of Catlett Letter
Selected Bibliography
About the Editors
Recenzii
H. Lee Cheek Jr., Sean R. Busick, and Carey M. Roberts have edited these debates in a fine volume.
[This] collection provides scholars with a fascinating glimpse into the emerging political and philosophical differences that underlay the rise of the second party system in American history. . . .The editors have done a scholars of the Jacksonian period a great service by highlighting a little known, but enormously interesting and consequential, debate.
The administration of John Quincy Adams was a transition period between what historians have called the Age of Jefferson and the Age of Jackson. Perhaps the most curious phenomenon of this unusual and fluid period was a philosophical debate between President Adams and Vice-President, John C. Calhoun-surely the only happening of its kind in U.S. history. This debate, carried out in the newspapers under pseudonyms, in the custom of the times, has been almost unknown, or dismissed as politics. But, in fact, it constitutes a serious discussion of the nature of Power and the interpretation of the Constitution that looks both backward and forward. By collecting these essays, the editors have made an important contribution to history and political science.
The momentous 'Patrick Henry-Onslow' debate, between John Quincy Adams, his supporters, and John C. Calhoun, evokes both the scalding political atmosphere of the 1820s and the perennial tension between liberty and government power. We owe a debt of gratitude to Professors Busick, Cheek, and Roberts for bringing this highly relevant debate back to life.
The debate between Vice President John C. Calhoun ('Onslow') and President John Quincy Adams or his ally ('Patrick Henry') captures the clash between Jeffersonian and Hamiltonian views at a pivotal moment in American history. Edited by some of today's leading experts in the field, this first-ever collection of the essays should appeal to scholars and buffs alike.
The debate between 'Patrick Henry' and 'Onslow' fought out in the pages of Washington newspapers in 1826, speaks to the idea of competing visions, present at the founding of the United States, of republican government. The editors of this timely volume return us to a lost world in which a seemingly small incident in the Senate could spark within the highest levels of government a deep and candid public analysis of the dialectic of liberty and power and its relation to the problem of limited government. Cheek and company deserve applause for this illuminating act of recovery.
[This] collection provides scholars with a fascinating glimpse into the emerging political and philosophical differences that underlay the rise of the second party system in American history. . . .The editors have done a scholars of the Jacksonian period a great service by highlighting a little known, but enormously interesting and consequential, debate.
The administration of John Quincy Adams was a transition period between what historians have called the Age of Jefferson and the Age of Jackson. Perhaps the most curious phenomenon of this unusual and fluid period was a philosophical debate between President Adams and Vice-President, John C. Calhoun-surely the only happening of its kind in U.S. history. This debate, carried out in the newspapers under pseudonyms, in the custom of the times, has been almost unknown, or dismissed as politics. But, in fact, it constitutes a serious discussion of the nature of Power and the interpretation of the Constitution that looks both backward and forward. By collecting these essays, the editors have made an important contribution to history and political science.
The momentous 'Patrick Henry-Onslow' debate, between John Quincy Adams, his supporters, and John C. Calhoun, evokes both the scalding political atmosphere of the 1820s and the perennial tension between liberty and government power. We owe a debt of gratitude to Professors Busick, Cheek, and Roberts for bringing this highly relevant debate back to life.
The debate between Vice President John C. Calhoun ('Onslow') and President John Quincy Adams or his ally ('Patrick Henry') captures the clash between Jeffersonian and Hamiltonian views at a pivotal moment in American history. Edited by some of today's leading experts in the field, this first-ever collection of the essays should appeal to scholars and buffs alike.
The debate between 'Patrick Henry' and 'Onslow' fought out in the pages of Washington newspapers in 1826, speaks to the idea of competing visions, present at the founding of the United States, of republican government. The editors of this timely volume return us to a lost world in which a seemingly small incident in the Senate could spark within the highest levels of government a deep and candid public analysis of the dialectic of liberty and power and its relation to the problem of limited government. Cheek and company deserve applause for this illuminating act of recovery.