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A Revolution in Favor of Government: Origins of the U.S. Constitution and the Making of the American State

Amazon.com Price:  $21.95 (as of 06/05/2019 10:00 PST- Details)

Description

On this trenchant new interpretation of The united states’s origins, Max Edling shows that the Federalists were primarily concerned with building a central authority that could act vigorously in defense of American interests. The Constitution transferred the powers of war-making and resource-extraction from the states to the national government, thereby creating a nation-state invested with all of the vital powers of Europe’s eighteenth-century ‘fiscal-military states.’A strong centralized government such as this, alternatively, challenged the American people’s deeply ingrained distrust of unduly concentrated authority. To protected the Constitution’s adoption within the face of this inherent suspicion, the Federalists had to balance the formation of a powerful national government with the strong current of anti-statism within the American political tradition. They did so, Edling argues, by designing a central authority that would be powerful in times of crisis, but which would make only limited demands at the citizenry and have a sharply restricted presence in society. Profiting from a newly published letterpress edition of the constitutional debates, A Revolution in Favor of Government recovers a neglected strand of the Federalist argument, making a persuasive case for rethinking the formation of the federal American state.

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