Rarely is it possible to hear the voice of the people in a
revolution except as it filters through the writings of articulate
individuals who may not really be representative. But on several
occasions during the effort to draft a constitution for
Massachusetts after 1776, the citizens of the Commonwealth were
asked to convene in their 300 town meetings to debate and convey to
the legislators their political theories, needs, and aspirations.
This book presents the transcribed debates and the replies returned
to Boston which constitute a unique body of material documenting
the political thought of the ordinary citizen. In an important,
extended introduction, the editors, interpreting the American
Revolution and its sustaining political framework in light of this
material, analyze the forces that were singular and those that were
universal in the shaping of American democracy. Comparisons are
made with popular uprisings in other parts of the world and at
other times, and the whole is integrated into a general discussion
of the nature of revolution and its relationship to constitutional
authority.
General
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