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American States of Nature transforms our understanding of the
American Revolution and the early makings of the Constitution. The
journey to an independent United States generated important
arguments about the existing condition of Americans, in which rival
interpretations of the term "state of nature" played a crucial
role. "State of nature" typically implied a pre-political condition
and was often invoked in support of individual rights to property
and self-defense and the right to exit or to form a political
state. It could connote either a paradise, a baseline condition of
virtue and health, or a hell on earth. This mutable phrase was
well-known in Europe and its empires. In the British colonies,
"state of nature" appeared thousands of times in juridical,
theological, medical, political, economic, and other texts from
1630 to 1810. But by the 1760s, a distinctively American
state-of-nature discourse started to emerge. It combined existing
meanings and sidelined others in moments of intense contestation,
such as the Stamp Act crisis of 1765-66 and the First Continental
Congress of 1774. In laws, resolutions, petitions, sermons,
broadsides, pamphlets, letters, and diaries, the American states of
nature came to justify independence at least as much as colonial
formulations of liberty, property, and individual rights did. In
this groundbreaking book, Mark Somos focuses on the formative
decade and a half just before the American Revolution. Somos'
investigation begins with a 1761 speech by James Otis that John
Adams described as "a dissertation on the state of nature," and
celebrated as the real start of the Revolution. Drawing on an
enormous range of both public and personal writings, many rarely or
never before discussed, the book follows the development of
America's state-of-nature discourse to 1775. The founding
generation transformed this flexible concept into a powerful theme
that shapes their legacy to this day. No constitutional history of
the Revolution can be written without it.
Winner of the Third Neu-Whitrow Prize (2021) granted by the
Commission on Bibliography and Documentation of IUHPS-DHST
Additional background information This book provides bibliographic
information, ownership records, a detailed worldwide census and a
description of the handwritten annotations for all the surviving
copies of the 1543 and 1555 editions of Vesalius' De humani
corporis fabrica. It also offers a groundbreaking historical
analysis of how the Fabrica traveled across the globe, and how
readers studied, annotated and critiqued its contents from 1543 to
2017. The Fabrica of Andreas Vesalius sheds a fresh light on the
book's vibrant reception history and documents how physicians,
artists, theologians and collectors filled its pages with copious
annotations. It also offers a novel interpretation of how an early
anatomical textbook became one of the most coveted rare books for
collectors in the 21st century.
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