What made the United States what it is began long before a shot
was fired at a redcoat in Lexington, Massachusetts in 1775. It
began quietly in homes and schoolrooms across the colonies in the
reading lessons women gave to children. Just as the Protestant
revolt originated in a practice of individual reading of the Bible,
so the theories of reading developed by John Locke were the means
by which a revolutionary attitude toward authority was disseminated
throughout the British colonies in North America that would come to
form in the United States. Gillian Brown takes us back to the
basics to understand why Americans value the right to individual
self-determination above all other values. It all begins with
children.
Locke crucially linked consent with childhood, and it is his
formulation of the child's natural right to consent that
eighteenth-century Americans learned as they learned to read
through Lockean-style pedagogies and textbooks. Tracing the Lockean
legacy through the New England Primer and popular readers, fables,
and fairy tales, Brown demonstrates how Locke's emphasis on the
liberty--and difficulty--of individual judgment became a received
notion in the American colonies.
After the revolution, American consent discourse features a
different prototype of individuality; instead of wronged children,
images of seduced or misguided women predominate postrevolutionary
culture. The plights of these women display the difficulties of
consent that Locke from the start realized. Individuals continually
confront standards and prejudices at odds with their own
experiences and judgments. Thus, the Lockean legacy to the United
States is the reminder of the continual work to be done to endow
every individual with consent and to make consent matter.
What emerged in America was a new and different attitude toward
authority in which authority does not belong to the elders but to
the upcoming generations and groups. To effect this dramatic a
change in the values of humankind took a grassroots revolution.
That's what this book is about.
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