Representation in the American Revolution, revised edition |
| |
| Gordon S. Wood |
| 96 pages, 5 x 8 |
| Paper 0-8139-2722-6 $14.95 |
| May 2008 |
 |
From one of America’s most celebrated historians, the Pulitzer
Prize winner Gordon S. Wood, comes an early work whose relevance
is undiminished. Originally published in 1969, now revised and
with a new preface, Representation in the American Revolution
examines the ways in which a government is created and how, in
the face of great difficulties as well as great possibilities,
its citizens are represented. Written immediately after the completion
of Wood’s Bancroft Award-winning The Creation of the
American Republic, this book elaborates on issues also explored
in that landmark work.
The subject is one that lies at the heart of any discussion of
democracy. Establishing a proper method of representation was
a goal and measure of the American Revolution, or as Thomas Jefferson
said in 1776, "the whole object of the present controversy."
A fine example of political and constitutional history, this timeless
little book will serve as an excellent introduction to issues
of representation for students in the fields of political science,
as well as history and law.
Gordon S. Wood is Alva O. Way University
Professor and Professor of History at Brown University. He is a
regular contributor to the New Republic
and the New York
Review of Books
and is the author of numerous bestselling books,
including most recently Revolutionary Characters
and The
Americanization of Benjamin Franklin
.