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Empire of the People - Settler Colonialism and the Foundations of Modern Democratic Thought (Hardcover)
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Empire of the People - Settler Colonialism and the Foundations of Modern Democratic Thought (Hardcover)
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American democracy owes its origins to the colonial settlement of
North America by Europeans. Since the birth of the republic,
observers such as Alexis de Tocqueville and J. Hector St. John de
Crevecoeur have emphasized how American democratic identity arose
out of the distinct pattern by which English settlers colonized the
New World. Empire of the People explores a new way of understanding
this process-and in doing so, offers a fundamental reinterpretation
of modern democratic thought in the Americas. In Empire of the
People, Adam Dahl examines the ideological development of American
democratic thought in the context of settler colonialism, a
distinct form of colonialism aimed at the appropriation of Native
land rather than the exploitation of Native labor. By placing the
development of American political thought and culture in the
context of nineteenth-century settler expansion, his work reveals
how practices and ideologies of Indigenous dispossession have laid
the cultural and social foundations of American democracy, and in
doing so profoundly shaped key concepts in modern democratic theory
such as consent, social equality, popular sovereignty, and
federalism. To uphold its legitimacy, Dahl also argues, settler
political thought must disavow the origins of democracy in colonial
dispossession-and in turn erase the political and historical
presence of native peoples. Empire of the People traces this thread
through the conceptual and theoretical architecture of American
democratic politics-in the works of thinkers such as Thomas
Jefferson, Thomas Paine, Alexis de Tocqueville, John O'Sullivan,
Ralph Waldo Emerson, Daniel Webster, Abraham Lincoln, Walt Whitman,
and William Apess. In its focus on the disavowal of Native
dispossession in democratic thought, the book provides a new
perspective on the problematic relationship between race and
democracy-and a different and more nuanced interpretation of the
role of settler colonialism in the foundations of democratic
culture and society.
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