Description
Book SynopsisExplores the idea that the people most important in a flourishing democracy are those who challenge the status quo.
Trade Review"Government by Dissent is an engaging meditation on one of Americas founding fantasies the fantasy of democratic self-government. [] Martins work makes a strong case for the continuing relevance of the founding eras democrats, most of whom have long passed from the nations political memory. In an era when many of our most vocal dissenters are reactionary cynics Glenn Beck, another contemporary fan of Thomas Paine, comes to mind here Martin reminds us that democratic dissent is not just an end in itself, but, in its best forms, an aspiration toward a political culture and political system that values a diversity of perspectives, especially those perspectives that have been formed out of a history of exclusion." * Common-Place *
"[] Martin seeks to understand how different Americans envisioned what he calls a & dissentient democracy that & values dissent as an essential core element. As Martin defines his term, dissentient democracy is more than engaging in dissent. It is a belief that democracy only remains healthy when government tolerates or even encourages dissent." * American Historical Review *
"Martin has given us a gifta timely reminder that ours is a nation born in dissent and nourished on disagreement. With a wealth of illustrative cases he reminds us that we Americans are and always have been a fractious people, and our democracy all the more vital for that." -- Terence Ball,Arizona State University
"The most thorough examination we have of how early Americans wrestled with what types of political dissent should be permitted, even promoted, in the new republic they were forming. Martin shows the modern relevance of their debates in ways that all will find valuableeven those who dissent from his views!" -- Rogers M. Smith,Christopher H. Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science, University of Pennsylvania
"[Martin] dissolves myths about the era of the American Revolution, showing that the years following it were anything but peaceful...Those with interests in the early national period will find Martin's research a must. Essential." -- P.D. Travis * Choice *
"[H]is incorporation of political theory with traditional historical sources, such as newspapers and contemporary political essays, successfully challenges readers to re-think not only the history of dissent in American politics but its current manifestations, benefits, and limitations." * Register of the Kentucky Historical Society *
"The author of this book makes an important contribution to the intellectual history of the early American republic by showing how 'dissentient' thought encouraged the development of a more populist democratic political ideology between 1776 and 1801...[Martin] gives us a fresh, useful look at earnestly republican and wisely dissenting theorists of the early republic." * The Historian *
Table of ContentsContentsAcknowledgments ixNote on the Text xi1 Introduction 12 Regulation, Not Rebellion: From "Rough Music" to Democratic Disorder 213 "Secret Plodders": Anti-Federalism, Anonymity,and the Struggle for Democratic Dissent 554 Institutionalizing Counterpublicity: The DemocraticSocieties of the 1790s 835 James Madison: Public Opinion and Dissentient Democracy 1156 "Salutary Collisions" and Multiple Discourses:A Farmer, a Lawyer, and Two Unknown Democrats 1477 The "Saucy Sons of Enquiry": Thomas Cooperand Democratic Dissent 1778 Conclusion 197Notes 207Bibliography 243Index 257About the Author 262