Political Community in Revolutionary Pennsylvania challenges prevailing histories of the American Revolution, which place undue focus on political elites, and argues that it was ordinary citizens who cared most about the establishment of a proper, representative, publicly legitimate political process.
Political Community in Revolutionary Pennsylvania challenges prevailing histories of the American Revolution, which place undue focus on political elites, and argues that it was ordinary citizens who cared most about the establishment of a proper, representative, publicly legitimate political process.
Kenneth Owen is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Illinois Springfield. He holds a BA, MSt, and DPhil from Queen's College, Oxford. He previously taught at Ohio University and the University of Sussex. He currently teaches courses on Colonial and Revolutionary America, the Early American Republic, Native American history, and the use of digital media.
Inhaltsangabe
Introduction 1: The Making of the Radical Manifesto, 1774-1777 2: Price Fixing and the Political Community, 1778-1779 3: Old Principles, New Constitutions, 1783-1790 4: Political Practices in the Early Republic, 1790-1794 5: The Persistence of the Principles of Political Community, 1795-1799 Conclusion Bibliography
Introduction 1: The Making of the Radical Manifesto, 1774-1777 2: Price Fixing and the Political Community, 1778-1779 3: Old Principles, New Constitutions, 1783-1790 4: Political Practices in the Early Republic, 1790-1794 5: The Persistence of the Principles of Political Community, 1795-1799 Conclusion Bibliography
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