
Here Is A Vividly Written And Compact Overview Of The Brilliant, Flawed, And Quarrelsome Group Of Lawyers, Politicians, Merchants, Military Men, And Clergy Known As The Founding Fathers--who Got As Close To The Ideal Of The Platonic Philosopher-kings As American Or World History Has Ever Seen. In The Founding Fathers Reconsidered, R. B. Bernstein Reveals Washington, Franklin, Jefferson, Adams, Hamilton, And The Other Founders Not As Shining Demigods But As Imperfect Human Beings--people Much Like Us--who Nevertheless Achieved Political Greatness. They Emerge Here As Men Who Sought To Transcend Their Intellectual World Even As They Were Bound By Its Limits, Men Who Strove To Lead The New Nation Even As They Had To Defer To The Great Body Of The People And Learn With Them The Possibilities And Limitations Of Politics. Bernstein Deftly Traces The Dynamic Forces That Molded These Men And Their Contemporaries As British Colonists In North America And As Intellectual Citizens Of The Atlantic Civilization's Age Of Enlightenment. He Analyzes The American Revolution, The Framing And Adoption Of State And Federal Constitutions, And The Key Concepts And Problems--among Them Independence, Federalism, Equality, Slavery, And The Separation Of Church And State--that Both Shaped And Circumscribed The Founders' Achievements As The United States Sought Its Place In The World.
This work investigates the complex legacy of the American Founding Fathers by examining them as fallible human beings rather than idealized historical figures. R. B. Bernstein, a noted legal historian, utilizes a synthesis of political theory and historical narrative to re-evaluate the contributions of figures such as Washington, Jefferson, and Hamilton. He argues that these men operated within the constraints of their Enlightenment intellectual framework while simultaneously navigating the practical, often messy, realities of nation-building. The text provides a balanced assessment of how these individuals balanced their personal ambitions with the collective needs of a nascent republic.
What You Will Find
Scholars and educators frequently cite this text as a concise, accessible entry point for understanding the complexities of the American founding era. Readers often note the clarity of the prose, which manages to distill dense constitutional history into a manageable format for both students and general history enthusiasts.
Page Count:
238
Publication Date:
2009-01-01
Publisher:
Ebsco Publishing
ISBN-10:
0199713626
ISBN-13:
9780199713622
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