
A Founding Document Finds Its Principles
Akhil Reed Amar’s Born Equal: Remaking America’s Constitution, 1840–1920 covers a period of American history that most of us learned as a series of familiar episodes: the crisis of the 1850s, the Civil War, Reconstruction’s rise and fall, the boom of the late 19th century, and the reforms of the Progressive Era. In the standard telling, the Constitution is the province of officials in the federal government—amended in dramatic fashion after the war, interpreted by courts in a mostly linear fashion, grappled over by men with names like Clay and Calhoun until the Progressives came along to say they no longer had any interest in it. (In my family we joke that there were no presidents or Supreme Court decisions between the end of Reconstruction and the rise of Teddy Roosevelt—our high-school and college U.S. history curricula pivoted hard to economic history for those three decades.) The business of the American people was business; obsession over constitutional text and foundational promises belonged to a small cadre of elites until it went underground and reappeared at the nation’s bicentennial.
The post A Founding Document Finds Its Principles appeared first on .
You may also like
By mfnnews
search
categories
Archives
navigation
Recent posts
- When Church Misses The Point January 18, 2026
- Brazilian au pair turns on former lover during murder trial, says he plotted wife’s death by luring stranger from fetish site January 18, 2026
- When human worth becomes conditional, caregiving becomes impossible January 18, 2026
- Alcaraz and Sabalenka through as fans fume on steamy day one at Australian Open January 18, 2026
- June Mar Fajardo, Bryan Bagunas, Bella Belen to be recognized by PSA in Annual Awards January 18, 2026
- After divorce, Carla Abellana finds healing and love in quiet remarriage January 18, 2026
- 6 na na-trap sa elevator sa BGC, sinagip ng Taguig firefighters January 18, 2026







Leave a Reply
You must be logged in to post a comment.