Deliberation, in recent years, has emerged as a form of civic
engagement worth reclaiming. In this persuasive book, Sandra M.
Gustafson combines historical literary analysis and political
theory in order to demonstrate that current democratic practices of
deliberation are rooted in the civic rhetoric that flourished in
the early American republic.
Though the U.S. Constitution made deliberation central to
republican self-governance, the ethical emphasis on group
deliberation often conflicted with the rhetorical focus on
persuasive speech. From Alexis de Tocqueville's ideas about the
deliberative basis of American democracy through the works of Walt
Whitman, John Dewey, John F. Kennedy, and Martin Luther King Jr.,
Gustafson shows how writers and speakers have made the aesthetic
and political possibilities of deliberation central to their
autobiographies, manifestos, novels, and orations. Examining seven
key writers from the early American republic--including James
Fenimore Cooper, David Crockett, and Daniel Webster--whose works of
deliberative imagination explored the intersections of style and
democratic substance, Gustafson offers a mode of historical and
textual analysis that displays the wide range of resources
imaginative language can contribute to political life.
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