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Ever since Douglass Adair convincingly demonstrated that a love of
fame was central to the American founding, political scientists and
historians have started to view the founders and their acts in a
new light. In The Noblest Minds, ten distinguished scholars examine
this passion for fame and honor and demonstrate for the first time
its significance in the development of American democracy. The
first two-thirds of the book is devoted to essays on individual
founders, as the contributors consider the role of fame in the
lives and political characters of Washington, Franklin, Madison,
Jefferson, Hamilton, Adams, and Marshall. The remaining chapters
analyze the founders' theoretical accomplishment in reviving
political science, and explore the problem of honor in the modern
world. Political scientists and American historians alike will find
this book to be valuable and illuminating. What made the founding
generation of American statesmen so outstanding? To answer this
question, The Noblest Minds brings together a distinguished group
of historians and political scientists to evaluate a neglected but
compelling theory advanced nearly four decades ago by Douglass
Adair. Adair argued that it was the 'love of fame' that moved many
of the leading lights of the founding generation. Adair's thesis is
the starting point for a series of searching essays on the role of
fame in the lives of Adams, Franklin, Hamilton, Jefferson, Madison,
Marshall, and Washington. These profiles also provide wide-ranging
historical and philosophical reflections on the question of fame.
What emerges from these essays is a more complex picture of the
founding generation than that presented by Adair. While
acknowledging the role of the love of fame, The Noblest Minds
argues for the influence of other concerns such as honor, virtue,
and the cause of liberty. This more complex picture of the founding
generation provides a unique and rewarding vantage point from which
to consider the question of 'character' in politics, which looms so
large in contemporary political debate. It illuminates the
differences between true fame and mere celebrity in such a way as
to point to considerations that transcend both. Political
scientists and American historians alike will find this book to be
valuable and illuminating.
With the end of the Cold War, the death of Communism, and the
decline of Socialism, what are the primary issues, ideologies, and
parties that now structure politics? Melzer, Zinman, and Weinberger
have compiled essays from prominent experts to examine the politics
of the past to help plot the political future. The first half of
the volume addresses OIdentity PoliticsO and OBig GovernmentO and
their respective places in the shaping of the United States
political environment since the end of the Cold War. The second
half of the volume focuses on the political climate in Western
Europe, Russia, India, and China.
This collection of essays by prominent American and French scholars
explores the political, cultural, and social implications of the
most fundamentally formative modern event, the French Revolution.
The contributors contend that the vocabulary and spirit of the
French Revolution has exercised greater influence on the modern
world than the more moderate and by all appearances more successful
American Revolution. The Legacy of the French Revolution delineates
the distinctive characters of the American and French revolutions
and analyzes the different variants of democratic political
traditions that have evolved from this seminal event. This book
will be of particular interest to political theorists, political
historians, and students of democratic theory.
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