"Amazing, sensational, brilliant, wise."<b>---Cass Sunstein</b>

"<i>America before 1787 </i>is . . . the well-crafted effort of a seasoned social scientist who has engaged in a lifetime of research and work."<b>---Jesse Russell, <i>The Federalist</i></b>

"[A] fresh examination of the so-called ‘divide and rule’ strategy through which Britain sought to govern its North American colonial empire,alongside the collective action colonists attempted to develop to counteract the imperial system."

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An original account, drawing on both history and social science, of the causes and consequences of the American Revolution

With America before 1787, Jon Elster offers the second volume of a projected trilogy that examines the emergence of constitutional politics in France and America. Here, he explores the increasingly uneasy relations between Britain and its American colonies and the social movements through which the thirteen colonies overcame their seemingly deep internal antagonisms.

Elster documents the importance of the radical uncertainty about their opponents that characterized both British and American elites and reveals the often neglected force of enthusiasm, and of emotions more generally, in shaping beliefs and in motivating actions. He provides the first detailed examinations of “divide and rule” as a strategy used on both sides of the Atlantic and of the rise and fall of collective action movements among the Americans. Elster also explains how the gradual undermining in America of the British imperial system took its toll on transatlantic relations and describes how state governments and the American Confederation made crucial institutional decisions that informed and constrained the making of the Constitution.

Drawing on a wide range of historical sources and on theories of modern social science, Elster brings together two fields of scholarship in innovative and original ways. The result is a unique synthesis that yields new insights into some of the most important events in modern history.

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“This book is a bold and original piece of research, and an intriguing interdisciplinary investigation. Elster is one of the foremost thinkers of his generation, renowned as a cogent analyst of social ‘mechanisms’ as well as a fierce critic of occult claims in the social sciences. Bringing these skills and aptitudes to historical material, he offers a fresh contribution to the study of the past in general as well as of the American revolutionary period specifically. This is a work of acute intelligence and brilliant insight, and should be welcomed by historians, social scientists, and political theorists alike.”—Richard Bourke, University of Cambridge
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780691242651
Publisert
2023-04-25
Utgiver
Vendor
Princeton University Press
Høyde
235 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
U, P, G, 05, 06, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
488

Forfatter

Biographical note

Jon Elster is professor emeritus at Columbia University and professeur honoraire at the Collège de France, Paris. He is the author of twenty previous books, including France before 1789: The Unraveling of an Absolutist Regime (Princeton), the first volume in the present trilogy; Reason and Rationality (Princeton); Explaining Social Behavior; Securities Against Misrule; and Alexis de Tocqueville: The First Social Scientist.