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How do you solve a problem like James Madison? The fourth president
is one of the most confounding figures in early American history --
his political trajectory seems almost intentionally inconsistent.
He was both for and against a strong federal government. He wrote
about the dangers of political parties in the Federalist papers and
then helped to found the Republican party just a few years later.
And though he has frequently been celebrated as the "father of the
constitution," his contributions to our founding document were
subtler than many have supposed. This so-called "Madison problem"
has occupied scholars for ages. Previous biographies have made
sense of Madison's mixed record by breaking his life into discrete
periods. But this approach falls short. Madison was, of course, a
single person -- a brilliant thinker whose life's work was to forge
a stronger Union around principles of limited government,
individual rights, and above all, justice. As Jay Cost argues in
this incisive new biography, we cannot comprehend Madison's legacy
without understanding him as a working politician. We tend to focus
on his accomplishments as a statesman and theorist -- but the same
ideals that guided his thinking in these arenas shaped his practice
of politics, where they were arguably more influential. Indeed,
Madison was the original American politician. Whereas other
founders split their time between politics and other vocations,
Madison dedicated himself singularly to the work of politics and
ultimately developed it into a distinctly American idiom. Bringing
together the full range of his intellectual life, Cost shows us
Madison as we've never seen him before: not as a man with uncertain
opinions and inconstant views -- but as a coherent and unified
thinker, a skilled strategist, and a key contributor to the ideals
that have shaped our history. He was, in short, the first American
politician.
An incisive account of the tumultuous relationship between
Alexander Hamilton and James Madison and of the origins of our
wealthy yet highly unequal nation In the history of American
politics there are few stories as enigmatic as that of Alexander
Hamilton and James Madison's bitterly personal falling out.
Together they helped bring the Constitution into being, yet soon
after the new republic was born they broke over the meaning of its
founding document. Hamilton emphasized economic growth, Madison the
importance of republican principles. Jay Cost is the first to argue
that both men were right--and that their quarrel reveals a
fundamental paradox at the heart of the American experiment. He
shows that each man in his own way came to accept corruption as a
necessary cost of growth. The Price of Greatness reveals the
trade-off that made the United States the richest nation in human
history, and that continues to fracture our politics to this day.
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