A Brilliant Solution: Inventing the American ConstitutionHarperCollins, 2003 M10 20 - 322 páginas Historian Carol Berkin's A Brilliant Solution: Inventing the American Constitution is a rich narrative portrait of post-revolutionary America and the men who shaped its political future. "Just as the Constitution was a brilliant solution to the problems of the 1780s, Carol Berkin's book is a brilliant account of the making of that constitution. Written with great verve and clarity, it nicely captures all the contingency and unpredictability in the framing of the Constitution."—Pulitzer Prize-winning author Gordon S. Wood Though the American Revolution is widely recognized as our nation's founding story, the years immediately following the war — when our government was a disaster and the country was in a terrible crisis — were in fact the most crucial in establishing the country's independence. The group of men who traveled to Philadelphia in the summer of 1787 had no idea what kind of history their meeting would make. But all their ideas, arguments, and compromises — from the creation of the Constitution itself, article by article, to the insistence that it remain a living, evolving document — laid the foundation for a government that has surpassed the founders' greatest hopes. Revisiting all the original historical documents of the period and drawing from her deep knowledge of eighteenth-century politics, Carol Berkin opens up the hearts and minds of America's founders, revealing the issues they faced, the times they lived in, and their humble expectations of success. |
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... House; the second, a challenge to the security of our nation. These two crises—the disputed presidential election of 2000 and the bombing of the Pentagon and the World Trade Center—made me realize that, after thirty years as a historian ...
... House; the second, a challenge to the security of our nation. These two crises—the disputed presidential election of 2000 and the bombing of the Pentagon and the World Trade Center—made me realize that, after thirty years as a historian ...
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... House. To many Americans, this attack on their own soil seemed like a dream, or, more properly, a nightmare—the reality of it took days, perhaps weeks to sink in. We, as a nation, were dazed and shaken—but we looked with considerable ...
... House. To many Americans, this attack on their own soil seemed like a dream, or, more properly, a nightmare—the reality of it took days, perhaps weeks to sink in. We, as a nation, were dazed and shaken—but we looked with considerable ...
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... houses or councils in their colonial governments that often betrayed local interests in exchange for pa- tronage and social status. Thus, the Confederation would have no separate executive branch, no independent judiciary, and no upper ...
... houses or councils in their colonial governments that often betrayed local interests in exchange for pa- tronage and social status. Thus, the Confederation would have no separate executive branch, no independent judiciary, and no upper ...
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