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Beyond the Founders attempts to speak into the historiography of the early Republic a story of the growth of democracy that is not limited in scope to the increase of white male suffrage. The editors of this massive collection of essays attempted to weave an argument that expounds the ideas of American political history beyond that of powerful white men who shaped the early institutions of American political structures and theory. Instead of a limited group controlling and shaping the whole, American politics was the story of a variety of players and factors vying for a voice and clamoring to be heard or affect change. Political parties were not just constructs of simplistic political theory, but rather a cultural reaction to a myriad of people and communities that leaders were forced to listen to. Agency and voice are given to cheese makers, women and mothers, racial groups and abolitionists, back-country farmers, educated men, masculine men, political writers, rowdy mobs, native Americans, and many other diverse participants in shaping the American political identity (public and private). One of the central arguments of these essays is that Americans, no matter their station or political leaning, reacted to an ever changing political scene and actively sought to participate and shape the direction politics flowed.
While these essays are powerful in their argument for a varied approach to American political structures and theories, some lack a strong explanation of what views they are exactly attempting to challenge. A specific example rests in chapter nine as Saul Cornell attempted to challenge recent historical views of the second amendment. While he provided a very compelling case of the contextual areas the second amendment traveled, he continued to mention “modern scholarship” without explaining who or what that scholarship was. This might be a nitpicky, but in order to fully understand how his argument challenges “modern scholars,” I think it is important to explain their specific positions and names (which I did not see detailed) other than just in a footnote.
The most compelling and interesting chapter was ironically the chapter devoted to political philosophic theory by John Brooke. At first glance, I dreaded reading it. However, Brooke’s descriptions of legitimacy, civil society, and consent I found incredibly fascinating and grounding of the entire collection. Once again Gould finds his way into our discussion as Americans navigated legitimacy within the the republic as without. Steven brought this out in his discussion of Gould as Americans fought to be legitimized on the world stage. In Beyond the Founders, Brooke puts American political theory squarely in the conversations of legitimacy and consent that dominated the Enlightenment era. Brooke calls it a “cross-fertilization of civil society and consent” and the “inherent contradictions” of the American political system. (219-220) It is precisely the breaks and parallels to European structures or philosophy that both make the American civil society unique in structure and legitimate.