The Citizenship Revolution:
Politics and the Creation of the American Union, 1774-1804
|
| |
| Douglas Bradburn |
| 416 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 |
| 5 figures, 1 table |
| Cloth 978-0-8139-2801-2 $35.00 |
| Jeffersonian
America |
| January 2009 |
 |
Most Americans believe that the ratification of the Constitution in 1788 marked the settlement of post-Revolutionary disputes over the meanings of rights, democracy, and sovereignty in the new nation. In The Citizenship Revolution, Douglas Bradburn undercuts this view by showing that the Union, not the Nation, was the most important product of independence.
In 1774, everyone in British North America was a subject of King George and Parliament. In 1776 a number of newly independent “states,” composed of “American citizens,” began cobbling together a Union to fight their former fellow countrymen. But who was an American? What did it mean to be a “citizen” and not a “subject”? And why did it matter?
Bradburn's stunning reinterpretation requires us to rethink
the traditional chronologies and stories of the American revolutionary
experience. He places battles over the meaning of “citizenship”
in law and in politics at the center of the narrative. He shows
that the new political community ultimately discovered that it
was not really a “Nation,” but a “Union of States”and that
it was the states that set the boundaries of belonging and the
very character of rights, for citizens and everyone else. To those
inclined to believe that the ratification of the Constitution
assured the importance of national authority and law in the lives
of American people, the emphasis on the significance and power
of the states as the arbiter of American rights and the character
of nationhood may seem strange. But, as Bradburn argues, state
control of the ultimate meaning of American citizenship represented
the first stable outcome of the crisis of authority, allegiance,
and identity that had exploded in the American Revolutiona
political settlement delicately reached in the first years of
the nineteenth century. So ended the first great phase of the
American citizenship revolution: a continuing struggle to reconcile
the promise of revolutionary equality with the pressing and sometimes
competing demands of law, order, and the pursuit of happiness.
Douglas Bradburn is Assistant Professor
in the History Department at SUNY, Binghamton.