Description

Book Synopsis


Trade Review
As the national love feast with Oliver North reminded us, Americans have an abiding attraction to war and warriors... The Republic Reborn probes the historical roots of this attraction. William and Mary Quarterly

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements
Introduction
Part I. The Birth of the Liberal Republic, 1790—1820
Chapter 1. "A New Era Has Commenced in the United States"
Chapter 2. John Taylor: "The Family of the Earth"
Chapter 3. John Adams: "Our Country Is in Masquerade!"
Chapter 4. Hugh Henry Brackenridge: Modern Chivalry and the Search for Self
Chapter 5. War and the Wages of Change
Part II. Ambition and Civism: War and Social Regeneration
Chapter 6. Society and Self-Made Men: Dreams and Disquietude
Chapter 7. Philip Freneau: "Besotted by Prosperity, Corrupted by Avarice, Abject from Luxury"
Chapter 8. Henry Clay: "The Tranquil, Putrescent Pool of Ignominious Peace"
Chapter 9. Charles J. Ingersoll: "Deep in the Slough of Faction"
Chapter 10. War as Social Crusade: Civism and Renewal
Part III. Religion and Repression: War and Early Capitalist Culture
Chapter 11. Con Men and Character: The Burden of Moral Free-Agency
Chapter 12. Spencer Houghton Cone: "I Will Be a Living Worker in the World—I Will Play No More"
Chapter 13. Benjamin Rush: "I Consider It as Possible to Convert Men into Republican Machines"
Chapter 14. Mason Locke Weems: "Sacrificing Their Gold to Gamblers, Their Health to Harlots, and Their Glory to Grog"
Chapter 15. War as Cultural Crusade: Self-Control and Civil Religion
Part IV. Founding Fathers and Wandering Sons: War and the Masks of Personae
Chapter 16. The Quiet Desperation of the Liberal Self
Chapter 17. Charles Brockden Brown: "I am Conscious of a Double Mental Existence"
Chapter 18. Alfred Brunson: "Either Rise to Distinction or Fall in the Attempt"
Chapter 19. John Quincy Adams: "Two Objects the Nearest to my Heart, My Country and My Father"
Chapter 20. War as Personal Quest: The Inner Healing of the Liberal Individual
Part V. Politics and Productivity: War and the Emergence of Liberalism
Chapter 21. The Crisis of Republicanism
Chapter 22. Tensions in Political Economy: Producers and Home Markets
Chapter 23. Strategies for Survival: From Enlightened to Energized Republicanism
Chapter 24. The Liberal Republications: "Our New Era in our Politics"
Chapter 25. The Liberal Impulse to War
Part VI. The Republic Reordered, 1812—1815
Chapter 26. The Crucible of War
Chapter 27. The Vindication of God's Republic
Chapter 28. The Triumph of Self-Made Men
Chapter 29. The Victory of Liberalism
Chapter 30. Into the Future
Notes
Index

The Republic Reborn

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    A Paperback / softback by Steven Watts

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      Publisher: Johns Hopkins University Press
      Publication Date: 26/09/1989
      ISBN13: 9780801839412, 978-0801839412
      ISBN10: 0801839416

      Description

      Book Synopsis


      Trade Review
      As the national love feast with Oliver North reminded us, Americans have an abiding attraction to war and warriors... The Republic Reborn probes the historical roots of this attraction. William and Mary Quarterly

      Table of Contents

      Acknowledgements
      Introduction
      Part I. The Birth of the Liberal Republic, 1790—1820
      Chapter 1. "A New Era Has Commenced in the United States"
      Chapter 2. John Taylor: "The Family of the Earth"
      Chapter 3. John Adams: "Our Country Is in Masquerade!"
      Chapter 4. Hugh Henry Brackenridge: Modern Chivalry and the Search for Self
      Chapter 5. War and the Wages of Change
      Part II. Ambition and Civism: War and Social Regeneration
      Chapter 6. Society and Self-Made Men: Dreams and Disquietude
      Chapter 7. Philip Freneau: "Besotted by Prosperity, Corrupted by Avarice, Abject from Luxury"
      Chapter 8. Henry Clay: "The Tranquil, Putrescent Pool of Ignominious Peace"
      Chapter 9. Charles J. Ingersoll: "Deep in the Slough of Faction"
      Chapter 10. War as Social Crusade: Civism and Renewal
      Part III. Religion and Repression: War and Early Capitalist Culture
      Chapter 11. Con Men and Character: The Burden of Moral Free-Agency
      Chapter 12. Spencer Houghton Cone: "I Will Be a Living Worker in the World—I Will Play No More"
      Chapter 13. Benjamin Rush: "I Consider It as Possible to Convert Men into Republican Machines"
      Chapter 14. Mason Locke Weems: "Sacrificing Their Gold to Gamblers, Their Health to Harlots, and Their Glory to Grog"
      Chapter 15. War as Cultural Crusade: Self-Control and Civil Religion
      Part IV. Founding Fathers and Wandering Sons: War and the Masks of Personae
      Chapter 16. The Quiet Desperation of the Liberal Self
      Chapter 17. Charles Brockden Brown: "I am Conscious of a Double Mental Existence"
      Chapter 18. Alfred Brunson: "Either Rise to Distinction or Fall in the Attempt"
      Chapter 19. John Quincy Adams: "Two Objects the Nearest to my Heart, My Country and My Father"
      Chapter 20. War as Personal Quest: The Inner Healing of the Liberal Individual
      Part V. Politics and Productivity: War and the Emergence of Liberalism
      Chapter 21. The Crisis of Republicanism
      Chapter 22. Tensions in Political Economy: Producers and Home Markets
      Chapter 23. Strategies for Survival: From Enlightened to Energized Republicanism
      Chapter 24. The Liberal Republications: "Our New Era in our Politics"
      Chapter 25. The Liberal Impulse to War
      Part VI. The Republic Reordered, 1812—1815
      Chapter 26. The Crucible of War
      Chapter 27. The Vindication of God's Republic
      Chapter 28. The Triumph of Self-Made Men
      Chapter 29. The Victory of Liberalism
      Chapter 30. Into the Future
      Notes
      Index

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