History of American Political ThoughtBryan-Paul Frost, Jeffrey Sikkenga Rowman & Littlefield, 2019年1月8日 - 968 頁 Revised and updated, this long-awaited second edition provides a comprehensive introduction to what the most thoughtful Americans have said about the American experience from the colonial period to the present. The book examines the political thought of the most important American statesmen, activists, and writers across era and ideologies, helping another generation of students, scholars, and citizens to understand more fully the meaning of America. This new second edition of the book includes chapters on several additional historical figures, including Walt Whitman, Lyndon Baines Johnson, and Ronald Reagan, as well as a new chapter on Barack Obama, who was not prominent in public life when the first edition was published. Significant revisions and additions have also been made to many of the original chapters, most notably on Antonin Scalia, which now updates his full legacy, increasing the breadth and depth of the collection. |
搜尋書籍內容
第 1 到 5 筆結果,共 84 筆
第 1 頁
... Democracy in America is at once the best book ever written on democracy and the best book ever written on America. Tocqueville connects the two subjects in his “Introduction,” and in his title, by observing that America is the land of ...
... Democracy in America is at once the best book ever written on democracy and the best book ever written on America. Tocqueville connects the two subjects in his “Introduction,” and in his title, by observing that America is the land of ...
第 2 頁
... democratic societies of which no complete model yet exists.” In response, Mill assured him that the thoughts in the second volume were deeper and more recondite than those in the first.9 The polish, style, and insight of Democracy in ...
... democratic societies of which no complete model yet exists.” In response, Mill assured him that the thoughts in the second volume were deeper and more recondite than those in the first.9 The polish, style, and insight of Democracy in ...
第 3 頁
... democracy in America than this one. Today, Tocqueville seems readily accessible to us. His recognition of the democratic revolution and its problems appears right on the mark, and the success of most of his predictions seems uncanny ...
... democracy in America than this one. Today, Tocqueville seems readily accessible to us. His recognition of the democratic revolution and its problems appears right on the mark, and the success of most of his predictions seems uncanny ...
第 4 頁
... democracy, a risk to which Madison does not directly refer but which Tocqueville states prominently in his “Introduction” to Democracy in America. As a sign of his fear, he habitually calls the American government a “democratic republic ...
... democracy, a risk to which Madison does not directly refer but which Tocqueville states prominently in his “Introduction” to Democracy in America. As a sign of his fear, he habitually calls the American government a “democratic republic ...
第 5 頁
... democrats but came to America as democrats. America, to which the Puritans came for a reason, is the only nation whose point of departure is clear rather than shrouded in ignorance and fable. If one puts together the democratic social ...
... democrats but came to America as democrats. America, to which the Puritans came for a reason, is the only nation whose point of departure is clear rather than shrouded in ignorance and fable. If one puts together the democratic social ...
內容
1 | |
23 | |
43 | |
62 | |
80 | |
George Washingtons Harmonizing of Traditions | 94 |
6 John Adams and the Republic of Laws | 113 |
The Political Philosophy of Thomas Jefferson | 131 |
27 Booker T Washington and the Severe American Crucible | 494 |
W E B Du Boiss Vision of Race Synthesis | 509 |
29Henry Adams and Our Ancient Faith | 521 |
Struggling to Reconcile Competing Claims | 535 |
31 Herbert Crolys Progressive Liberalism | 553 |
32 Theodore Roosevelt and the Stewardship of the American Presidency | 568 |
33 Woodrow Wilson the Organic State and American Republicanism | 582 |
Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr and Louis D Brandeis | 602 |
8 The Political Science of James Madison | 149 |
9 Alexander Hamilton on the Grand Strategy of Free Government | 167 |
James Wilson on Natural Law and Natural Rights | 193 |
Brutus and The Federal Farmer | 217 |
12 The New Constitutionalism of Publius | 232 |
John Marshall | 250 |
14 John Quincy Adams on Principle and Practice | 271 |
The Political Thought of Daniel Webster | 288 |
16 Henry Clay and the Statesmanship of Compromise | 303 |
17 For Constitution and Country? John C Calhoun American Politics and the Union | 317 |
Justice Joseph Story and the Founders Constitution | 336 |
Nature and Natures God | 354 |
20 Religion Nature and Disobedience in the Thought of Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau | 367 |
Frederick Douglass William Lloyd Garrison and the Abolition of Slavery | 388 |
The Moderation of a Democratic Statesman | 408 |
23 Walt Whitman and Politics by Other Means | 430 |
The Political Thought of Elizabeth Cady Stanton | 446 |
25 Mark Twain on the American Character | 458 |
The Political Thought of William Graham Sumner | 480 |
35 John Deweys Alternative Liberalism | 619 |
36 Franklin Delano Roosevelt and the Second Bill of Rights | 632 |
Radical for Capitalism | 649 |
38 Walker Percys American Thomism | 665 |
39 Russell Kirks AngloAmerican Conservatism | 678 |
40 The Two Revolutions of Martin Luther King Jr | 699 |
From Apolitical Acolyte to Political Preacher | 721 |
The Popular Transformation of American Feminism in the Late Twentieth Century | 733 |
Lyndon Baines Johnsons Bold Synthesis of American Thought | 749 |
44 John Rawlss Democratic Theory of Justice | 768 |
The Challenge of Statesmanship in Liberal Democracy | 789 |
46 Irving Kristol and the Reinvigoration of Bourgeois Republicanism | 811 |
47 The Jurisprudence of William Joseph Brennan Jr and Thurgood Marshall | 829 |
Statesman and Original Political Thinker | 845 |
49 The Textualist Jurisprudence of Antonin Scalia | 863 |
The Progressive Political Thought of Barack Obama | 882 |
903 | |
About the Contributors | 937 |
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