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This book situates the origins of American political science in
relation to the transatlantic history of liberalism. In a
corrective to earlier accounts, it argues that, as political
science took shape in the nineteenth century American academy, it
did more than express a pre-existing American liberalism. The
pioneers of American political science participated in
transatlantic networks of intellectual and political elites that
connected them directly to the vicissitudes of liberalism in
Europe. The book shows how these figures adapted multiple
contemporary European liberal arguments to speak to particular
challenges of mass democratic politics and large-scale industry as
they developed in America. Political science's pioneers in the
American academy were thus active agents of the Americanization of
liberalism. When political science first secured a niche in the
American academy during the antebellum era, it advanced a
democratized classical liberal political vision overlapping with
the contemporary European liberalism of Tocqueville and John Stuart
Mill. As political science expanded during the dramatic growth of
university ideals and institutions in the Gilded Age, divergence
within its liberalism came to the fore in the area of political
economy. In the late-nineteenth century, this divergence was
fleshed out into two alternative liberal political
visions-progressive liberal and disenchanted classical liberal-with
different analyses of democracy and the administrative state.
During the early twentieth-century, both visions found expression
among early presidents of the new American Political Science
Association, and subsequently, within contests over the meaning of
'liberalism' as this term acquired salience in American political
discourse. In sum, this book showcases how the history of American
political science offers a venue in which we see how a distinct
current of mid-nineteenth-century European liberalism was
divergently transformed into alternative twentieth-century American
liberalisms.
Since emerging in the late nineteenth century, political science
has undergone a radical shift--from constructing grand narratives
of national political development to producing empirical studies of
individual political phenomena. What caused this change? "Modern
Political Science"--the first authoritative history of Anglophone
political science--argues that the field's transformation shouldn't
be mistaken for a case of simple progress and increasing scientific
precision. On the contrary, the book shows that political science
is deeply historically contingent, driven both by its own inherited
ideas and by the wider history in which it has developed.
Focusing on the United States and the United Kingdom, and the
exchanges between them, "Modern Political Science" contains
contributions from leading political scientists, political
theorists, and intellectual historians from both sides of the
Atlantic. Together they provide a compelling account of the
development of political science, its relation to other
disciplines, the problems it currently faces, and possible
solutions to these problems.
Building on a growing interest in the history of political
science, "Modern Political Science" is necessary reading for anyone
who wants to understand how political science got to be what it is
today--or what it might look like tomorrow.
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