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The Rise of American Democracy: Jefferson to Lincoln by Sean Wilentz

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(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: October 2005
  • 992pp
  • Sales Rank: 319,407

    Reader Rating: (11 ratings)

    Detailed Rating: "Intellectual Stimulation" See All

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    Product Details

    • Pub. Date: October 2005
    • Publisher: Norton, W. W. & Company, Inc.
    • Format: Hardcover, 992pp
    • Sales Rank: 319,407

    Synopsis

    Winner of the Bancroft Award: "Monumental...a tour de force...awesome in its coverage of political events."-Gordon Wood, New York Times Book Review

    The New York Times Sunday Book Review - Gordon S. Wood

    This enormous book by Sean Wilentz has been in the works a long time, and the results are nothing less than monumental. An old-fashioned account of the rise of democracy during the first half of the 19th century, it is a tour de force of historical compilation and construction that more than justifies all the articles and monographs on antebellum politics written by historians over the past several decades. Wilentz, the Dayton-Stockton professor of history at Princeton, has drawn extensively on these secondary sources and on his own research. He has brought it all together into a clear and generally readable narrative.

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    Biography

    Sean Wilentz is the George Henry Davis '86 Professor of History and director of the Program in American Studies at Princeton University. He lives in Princeton, New Jersey.

    Customer Reviews

    Scholastic, informative, enjoyable, but biased. Should not be the only inquiry on the subject.by jonathan_schlackman

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    March 05, 2009: A good history of early American Politics. A little overly scholastic maybe, and perhaps a little bit biased with a modern-day, partisan view of politics.

    Wilentz picks sides here, glosses over "his" heroes' character flaws, and plays down (or leaves out) pertinent information that could give readers a fuller appreciation of the time periods presented.

    For instance: Jefferson comes off rather well, Hamilton a real demagogue, and Washington gets a less than admirable treatment here. To Wilentz, the federalists are anti-democratic aristocrats intent on using government to enrich themselves (not accurate in my opinion), and the Republicans (the earliest Democrats) are the heroes fighting for liberty against their tyranny

    The author tries to be impartial, but his modern day liberal views are pretty bare for all to see- which is a bit of a shame considering the breadth of what he's trying to accomplish here- a full and thorough accounting of political thought and history from 1800s-1860s.

    Not a bad read though, especially for the more "progressive" minded, but SHOULD NOT be the only source for information on the subjects covered.

    I Also Recommend: Battle Cry of Freedom, Team of Rivals, Liberty and Power, Union 1812, Infamous Scribblers.

    Good for (Advanced) Studentsby Anonymous

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    January 19, 2009: I read this book the summer before I had to take a senior level college class on antebellum America. It turned out to be the perfect book to read. It covered most of the major topics in the course (at least the political aspects), and probably helped me do much better than I otherwise would have done.

    As far as I can tell there is no new scholarship in this text. What makes it unique, however, is the complex synthesis Wilentz uses by taking massive amounts of state and local sources and blending them into what becomes an original narrative.

    Wilentz is a good author and a respected historian (which is why I chose this book in particular). I would recommend this book for those who want a thorough understanding of the early American Republic.


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