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The Framers' Coup - The Making of the United States Constitution (Hardcover)
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The Framers' Coup - The Making of the United States Constitution (Hardcover)
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Most Americans revere their Constitution yet know relatively little
about its origins. Indeed, until now, nobody has written a
comprehensive history of the Constitution's making. Based on
prodigious research and told largely through participants' voices,
Michael J. Klarman's The Framers' Coup: The Making of the United
States Constitution fills that void. Klarman's narrative features
colorful characters and riveting stories, such as the rebellion by
debtor farmers in Massachusetts that contributed enormously to the
Constitution's creation, George Washington's agonized deliberations
over whether to attend the Philadelphia convention, Patrick Henry's
demagogic efforts to defeat ratification in Virginia, and the
political machinations of Alexander Hamilton and John Jay at the
New York ratifying convention that produced an improbable victory
for ratification. Three principal themes characterize Klarman's
narrative. The first is contingency. The Philadelphia convention
almost did not take place; once assembled, it nearly failed; and
the Constitution it produced almost went unratified. Second, the
Constitution was more a product of ordinary political struggle than
of disinterested political philosophizing. Creditors and debtors,
city dwellers and backcountry farmers, northerners and
southerners-all had competing interests and fought for them with
the weapons of ordinary politics, such as the disparaging of
adversaries' motives, character assassination, and even threats of
violence. Finally, the Framers wrote a Constitution very different
from what most Americans anticipated or wanted. Many of its
features were designed to insulate the national government from
populist political influence. Why was the Philadelphia convention
so unrepresentative of national opinion, and how did the Framers
convince ordinary Americans to approve a scheme that drastically
reduced their political influence? For anyone interested in a
comprehensive, lively, and provocative account of the making of the
American Constitution, this is the ideal volume.
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