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The Paradox of Progress - Economic Change, Individual Enterprise, and Politic Culture in Michigan, 1837-1878 (Paperback)
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The Paradox of Progress - Economic Change, Individual Enterprise, and Politic Culture in Michigan, 1837-1878 (Paperback)
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Americans have long recognized the central importance of the
nineteenth-century Republican party in preserving the Union, ending
slavery, and opening the way for industrial capitalism. On the
surface, the story seems straightforward -- the party's "free
labor" ethos, embracing the opportunity that free soil presented
for social and economic mobility, and condemning the danger that
slavery in the territories posed for that mobility, foreshadowed
the GOP's later devotion to unfettered enterprise and industrial
capitalism. In reality, however, the narrative thread is not so
linear. This work examines the contradiction that lay at the heart
of the supremely influential ideology of the early Republican
party. The Paradox of Progress explores one of the most profound
changes in American history -- the transition from the anti-market,
anti-monopoly, and democratic ideology of Jacksonian America to the
business-dominated politics and unregulated excesses of Gilded Age
capitalism. Guiding this transformation was the nineteenth-century
Republican party. Drawing heavily from both the pro-market
commitments of the early Whig party and the anti-capitalist culture
of Jackson's Democratic party, the early Republican party found
itself torn between these competing values. Nowhere was this
contested process more obvious or more absorbing than in Civil
War-era Michigan, the birthplace of the Republican party. In The
Paradox of Progress, a fascinating look at the central factors
underlying the history of the GOP, Martin Hershock reveals how in
their determination to resolve their ideological dilemma,
Republicans of the Civil War era struggled to contrive a formula
that wo uld enable them to win popular elections and to model
America's acceptance of Gilded Age capitalism.
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