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A Brilliant Solution: Inventing the American Constitution

Amazon.com Price:  $12.35 (as of 06/05/2019 09:54 PST- Details)

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A rich narrative portrait of post-revolutionary The us and the men who shaped its political future

 

Though the American Revolution is widely recognized as our nation’s founding story, the years immediately following the war—when our government used to be a disaster and the country used to be in a terrible crisis—were in truth the most a very powerful in establishing the country’s independence. The group of men who traveled to Philadelphia in the summer of 1787 had no idea what sort of history their meeting would make. But all their ideas, arguments, and compromises—from the creation of the Constitution itself, article by article, to the insistence that it remain a living, evolving document—laid the foundation for a government that has surpassed the founders’ greatest hopes. Revisiting all of the original historical documents of the period and drawing from her deep knowledge of eighteenth-century politics, Carol Berkin opens up the hearts and minds of The us’s founders, revealing the issues they faced, the times they lived in, and their humble expectations of success.
“The majority of historians seem to suggest that the founders knew just what to do–and did it, creating a government that would endure for centuries,” writes CUNY historian Carol Berkin in the introduction to A Brilliant Solution. Sitting atop the pedestals we’ve placed them on, these figures would be “amused” by such notions, she says, because in fact the Constitutional Convention used to be gripped by “a near-paranoid fear of conspiracies” and might easily have succumbed to “a collective anxiety” over its daunting task. The story of the birth of the U.S. Constitution has been told many times, perhaps best by Catherine Drinker Bowen in Miracle at Philadelphia. Berkin’s rendition of these well-known events is clear and concise. It does a bit more telling than showing, but this appears to be in the service of brevity–the main text is only about 200 pages. (Another 100 pages of useful appendices follow, including the full texts of the Articles of Confederation and the Constitution, plus short biographies of all of the convention delegates.) Berkin is an opinionated narrator, unafraid, for instance, to call Maryland’s Luther Martin “determinedly uncouth.” She also points out that American government has evolved in ways that would make the founders cringe: they believed the presidency would be a ceremonial office (reasonably than the locus of the nation’s political power) and that political parties were bad (when, in truth, they have got served democracy well). Readers who want a sure-footed introduction to The us’s founding would do well to start here. –John J. Miller

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