Nations, Markets, and War:
Modern History and the American Civil War |
| |
| Nicholas Onuf and Peter S. Onuf |
| 352 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 |
| Cloth 0-8139-2502-9 $45.00 |
 |
In this provocative interdisciplinary study, Nicholas and Peter
Onuf argue that the American Civil War was the first great war
between modern nations, emerging from the wreckage of a federal
union that was supposed to secure perpetual peace.
Situating conceptions of nationhood and war in the broader context
of modern history, the authors draw attention to overlooked aspects
of liberal thought that stand in tension with the ahistorical
individuals and markets that are so familiar to us today. The
liberal conception of the autonomous, rights-bearing individual
is the product, not the predicate, of what has actually been a
protracted process of development. New ways of historical thinking
gave rise to new ideas about the nations that collectively constituted
international society; the behavior of sovereign nations in turn
provided a liberal model for the reorganization of domestic societies.
Changing conceptions of markets provided the impetus for nation-making,
as well as for war. In the bookís second part the authors show
how controversy over trade policy in the early American republic
led to irreconcilable ideas about the nature of the union and
the relationship between home and world markets. When Southerners
embraced the logic of nationhood of their known region and insisted
that slavery promoted the wealth and welfare of the civilized
world, Northerners held that an expanding continental republic
embodied their national aspirations. In this light, the clash
between Southern concerns with free markets and Northern concerns
about nation-making, each classically liberal in its own way,
looms especially large in the sectional tensions that led to the
Civil War.
The Union and Confederacy went to war as great nations determined
to secure their place in the modern, civilized world because they
were so much alike. Their war should not be seen as a tragic,
inexplicable anomaly in American history. It was, instead, the
precedent for subsequent, and even more horrific, conflicts among
nations.
Nicholas Onuf is Professor Emeritus of
International Relations at Florida International University and
the author of The Republican Legacy in International Thought
.
Peter Onuf, Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation
Professor of History at the University of Virginia, is the author
of Jefferson's Empire: The Language of
American Nationhood (Virginia).