Americans have been claiming and defending rights since long
before the nation achieved independence. But few Americans
recognize how profoundly the nature of rights has changed over the
past three hundred years. In "The Nature of Rights at the American
Founding and Beyond," Barry Alan Shain gathers together essays by
some of the leading scholars in American constitutional law and
history to examine the nature of rights claims in
eighteenth-century America and how they differed, if at all, from
today's understandings. Was America at its founding predominantly
individualistic or, in some important way, communal? Similarly,
which understanding of rights was of greater centrality: the
historical "rights of Englishmen" or abstract natural rights? And
who enjoyed these rights, however understood? Everyone? Or only
economically privileged and militarily responsible male heads of
households?
The contributors also consider how such concepts of rights have
continued to shape and reshape the American experience of political
liberty to this day. Beginning with the arresting transformation in
the grounding of rights prompted by the American War of
Independence, the volume moves through what the contributors
describe as the "Founders' Bill of Rights" to the "second" Bill of
Rights that coincided with the Civil War, and ends with the
language of rights erupting from the horrors of the Second World
War and its aftermath in the Cold War. By asking what kind of
nation the founding generation left us, or intended to leave us,
the contributors are then able to compare that nation to the nation
we have become. Most, if not all, of the essays demonstrate that
the nature of rights in America has been anything but constant, and
that the rights defended in the late eighteenth century stand at
some distance from those celebrated today.
"Contributors" Akhil Reed Amar, Yale University * James H.
Hutson, Library of Congress * Stephen Macedo, Princeton University
* Richard Primus, University of Michigan * Jack N. Rakove, Stanford
University * John Phillip Reid, New York University * Daniel T.
Rodgers, Princeton University * A. Gregg Roeber, Pennsylvania State
University * Barry Alan Shain, Colgate University * Rogers M.
Smith, University of Pennsylvania * Leif Wenar, University of
Sheffield * Gordon S. Wood, Brown University
General
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