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POWER AND LIBERTY by Gordon S. Wood Kirkus Star

POWER AND LIBERTY

Constitutionalism in the American Revolution

by Gordon S. Wood

Pub Date: Sept. 1st, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-19-754691-8
Publisher: Oxford Univ.

The Pulitzer and Bancroft winner delivers another masterful book of Revolutionary War–era history.

No historian knows more about the founding years of the U.S. than Wood. In his latest, he once again demonstrates his characteristic clarity in an examination of the origins and growth of American constitutional principles from the Stamp Act crisis of 1765 into the 19th century, “the most creative period of consti­tutionalism in American history and one of the most creative in modern Western history.” This introduction to the formative half-century of American history maintains a taut focus on the nation’s early constitutional development. While that emphasis comes at the cost of attention to social realities, the author sharply clarifies the stages that the founding generation went through to create their governments and the struggles to understand what they were doing. To Wood, American’s growing realization during and after the Revolution that they had to discard the Articles of Confederation for a new frame of government constituted “a momen­tous change, and one not at all anticipated in 1776.” As the author notes, it created “a radically new government altogether—one that utterly transformed the structure of central authority.” In what’s likely to be the most controversial aspect of the book, Wood finds the origins of this transformation not in an economic and social crisis prior to 1787 but rather in the maturation of American constitutional thought. The author shows that the Constitution didn’t arise out of social and economic turmoil; instead, it emerged from constitutional, legal, and structural realities as well as innovative thought. Wood’s argument is the most potent in the brilliant two chapters on the judiciary and the distinction between public and private spheres of life. While he may receive criticism for overlooking much of the social and cultural history produced by other historians, no one will be able to ignore the power of his arguments.

A fresh, lucid distillation of Wood’s vast learning about the origins of American government.