For most Americans, the Revolutions main achievement is summed up by the phrase life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.
Yet far from a straightforward attempt to be free of Old World laws and customs, the American founding was also a bid for inclusion in the community of nations as it existed in 1776.
America aspired to diplomatic recognition under international law and the authority to become a colonizing power itself.
As Eliga Gould shows in this reappraisal of American history, the Revolution was an international transformation of the first importance.
To conform to the public law of Europes imperial powers, Americans crafted a union nearly as centralized as the one they had overthrown, endured taxes heavier than any they had faced as British colonists, and remained entangled with European Atlantic empires long after the Revolution ended.
No factor weighed more heavily on Americans than the legally plural Atlantic where they hoped to build their empire.
Gould follows the regions transfiguration from a fluid periphery with its own rules and norms to a place where people of all descriptions were expected to abide by the laws of Western Europe--civilized laws that precluded neither slavery nor the dispossession of Native Americans.
282.72 Lei
Vreau să citescDrew Gilpin Faust
313.88 Lei
Barbara Fifer
111.32 Lei
Roger Lowenstein
111.60 Lei
Thomas J. Noel
128.06 Lei
Michael J. Hightower
139.22 Lei
William M. Leogrande
167.12 Lei
Eleanor Roosevelt
113.03 Lei
John R. Galvin
111.32 Lei
Alexander Stille
183.60 Lei
Meredith Henne Baker
195.02 Lei
M. William Phelps
118.75 Lei