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American political history has been built around narratives of
crisis, in which what “counts” are the moments when seemingly
stable political orders collapse and new ones rise from the ashes.
No doubt the history of American politics is filled with such
moments—the Great Depression and the New Deal; the rise of modern
conservatism in the 1960s and ’70s; and, most recently, the 2016
election of Donald Trump. But while crisis-centered frameworks can
make sense of certain dimensions of political culture, partisan
change, and governance, they also often steal attention from the
production of categories like race, gender, and citizenship status
that transcend the usual breakpoints in American history. Brent
Cebul, Lily Geismer, and Mason B. Williams have brought together
first-rate scholars from a wide range of subfields who are making
structures of state power—not moments of crisis or partisan
realignment—integral to their analyses. All of the contributors
see political history as defined less by elite subjects than by
tensions between state and economy, state and society, and state
and subject—tensions that reveal continuities as much as
disjunctures. This broader definition incorporates analyses of the
crosscurrents of power, race, and identity; the recent turns toward
the history of capitalism and transnational history; and an
evolving understanding of American political development that cuts
across eras of seeming liberal, conservative, or neoliberal
ascendance. The result is a rich revelation of what political
history is today.
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