The American Enlightenment, 1750-1820This concise literary history of the American Enlightenment captures the varied and conflicting voices of religious and political conviction in the decades when the new nation was formed. Robert Ferguson's trenchant interpretation yields new understanding of this pivotal period for American culture. |
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Page 17
... debates and formed Results by one Vote and by two Votes , which went out to the World as unanimous . " The purpose of silence is to minimize and control difference . If properly restrained , private debate can be subsumed in a public ...
... debates and formed Results by one Vote and by two Votes , which went out to the World as unanimous . " The purpose of silence is to minimize and control difference . If properly restrained , private debate can be subsumed in a public ...
Page 44
... debate . The relation between dissenting religious traditions and the growth of oppositional political discourse is a barometer of cultural modification and literary creativity throughout the era . Steeped in the English revolutions of ...
... debate . The relation between dissenting religious traditions and the growth of oppositional political discourse is a barometer of cultural modification and literary creativity throughout the era . Steeped in the English revolutions of ...
Page 142
... debate in the first Congress and the state assemblies – have the effect years of magnifying the overall document . The original framers reject the need for a Bill of Rights because , as Roger Sherman argues on September 12th , “ the ...
... debate in the first Congress and the state assemblies – have the effect years of magnifying the overall document . The original framers reject the need for a Bill of Rights because , as Roger Sherman argues on September 12th , “ the ...
Contents
What Is Enlightenment? Some American Answers | 22 |
Religious Voices | 44 |
Writing the Revolution | 80 |
Copyright | |
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accept Adams already American answer appears argument asks assertion authority become begins British citizen civil claim colonial comes Common Sense Congress Constitution Convention culture dangers debate discourse document dominate early effect eighteenth-century England English Enlightenment event expression fact fear figure frame Franklin freedom give hand hope human ideas identity important independence intellectual interest Jefferson John king knowledge land language later leaders letter liberty light literary literature meaning ment mind minister nature never opposition original Paine pamphlet period political possible present Press principle problems protest question radical reason religion religious remains Republic republican Revolution revolutionary rhetoric separate sermon slave slavery spirit success tells things thought tion truth turn understanding union United University virtue voice Washington women writing