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Democracy by Petition - Popular Politics in Transformation, 1790-1870 (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R1,120
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Democracy by Petition - Popular Politics in Transformation, 1790-1870 (Hardcover)
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Winner of the James P. Hanlan Book Award Winner of the J. David
Greenstone Book Prize Winner of the S. M. Lipset Best Book Award
This pioneering work of political history recovers the central and
largely forgotten role that petitioning played in the formative
years of North American democracy. Known as the age of democracy,
the nineteenth century witnessed the extension of the franchise and
the rise of party politics. As Daniel Carpenter shows, however,
democracy in America emerged not merely through elections and
parties, but through the transformation of an ancient political
tool: the petition. A statement of grievance accompanied by a list
of signatures, the petition afforded women and men excluded from
formal politics the chance to make their voices heard and to
reshape the landscape of political possibility. Democracy by
Petition traces the explosion and expansion of petitioning across
the North American continent. Indigenous tribes in Canada, free
Blacks from Boston to the British West Indies, Irish canal workers
in Indiana, and Hispanic settlers in territorial New Mexico all
used petitions to make claims on those in power. Petitions
facilitated the extension of suffrage, the decline of feudal land
tenure, and advances in liberty for women, African Americans, and
Indigenous peoples. Even where petitioners failed in their
immediate aims, their campaigns advanced democracy by setting
agendas, recruiting people into political causes, and fostering
aspirations of equality. Far more than periodic elections,
petitions provided an everyday current of communication between
officeholders and the people. The coming of democracy in America
owes much to the unprecedented energy with which the petition was
employed in the antebellum period. By uncovering this neglected yet
vital strand of nineteenth-century life, Democracy by Petition will
forever change how we understand our political history.
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