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Sentimental Democracy: The Evolution of America's Romantic Self-Image [Hardcover]

Andrew Burstein (Author)
3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

April 1999
The provocative interpretation of American political rhetoric

Americans like to use words of sentiment and sympathy, passion and power, to explain their democracy. In a provocative new work, Andrew Burstein examines the metaphorically rich language which Americans developed to express their guiding principle: that the New World would improve upon the Old. In journals, letters, speeches, and books, an impassioned rhetoric of "feeling" set the tone for American patriotism.

Burstein shows how the eighteenth century "culture of sensibility" encouraged optimism about a global society: the new nation would succeed. Americans believed, as much by sublime feeling as by intellectual achievement or political liberty. As they grew more self-confident, this pacific ideal acquired teeth: noble Washington and humane Jefferson yielded to boisterous Jackson, and the language of gentle feeling to the force of Manifest Destiny. Yet Americans never stopped celebrating what they believed was their innate impulse to do good.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

The 1992 publication of Gordon S. Wood's The Radicalism of the American Revolution renewed interest in interpreting the War for Independence as an expression of national rather than regional values. Most of these studies trace the universal desire for republican governance in the 13 colonies to the Enlightenment's valorization of reason and intellect. In Sentimental Democracy, Andrew Burstein argues that this nation's forefathers were not just led by the power of their minds but by the feelings in their hearts.

Americans, according to Burstein, viewed their culture as exceptional because of their susceptibility to emotions. While European politicos coldly manipulated their subjects, Americans recognized both the benefits and temptations that their senses provided them. By the time of the Revolution, patriots such as "the martyr" Joseph Warren demonstrated their commitment to public virtue by exercising sentimental passion while restraining excess emotion. Later, both republicans and federalists defined themselves publicly as individuals moderately appeasing the appetites of democracy. During and after Andrew Jackson's administration, Burstein argues, the virtues of moral restraint were relegated to the domestic sphere, while men exerted their nationalistic sentiments in a vigorous campaign of territorial expansion.

All in all, Burstein sheds new light on the primary documents upon which the political history of this nation rests. His assertion that nationalist intellectuals such as Thomas Jefferson and J. Hector Saint John de Crèvecoeur invested as much faith in human emotion as in reason provocatively revises traditional interpretations surrounding the passionate nature of politics in the Republic's formative years. --John M. Anderson

From Publishers Weekly

As the season of impeachment subsides and the campaign season looms on the horizon, readers with an interest in American political expression would do well to turn to Burstein (The Inner Jefferson). The American Revolution, he writes, would have failed without the "language of feeling" that was used to articulate the Enlightenment ideal of a just society. He goes on to cite great examples of American expression, from the sublime phrasings of the Declaration of Independence, which combined "masculine sentiment and a kind of theater," to Patrick Henry's impassioned cry, "Give me liberty or give me death!" As America grew more powerful, however, the voices of the noble Washington and the humane Jefferson were supplanted by that of the pugnacious Andrew Jackson (who, writes Burstein, "seemed to enjoy killing"). A rarity among academic writers, Burstein minimizes his own rhetoric and instead uses a rich panoply of original sources that give every page a rich texture and render the whole stirring and convincing. Though the book focuses on the first decades after the Revolution, Burstein does discuss the relation of 18th-century political rhetoric to the contemporary variety. Accessible and insightful, Burstein's book explicates and vivifies the discourse of democracy.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 406 pages
  • Publisher: Hill & Wang Pub; 1 edition (April 1999)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0809085356
  • ISBN-13: 978-0809085354
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.5 x 1.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.5 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,583,165 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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6 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars How To Build A Mythic Discourse, December 15, 2002
In SENTIMENTAL DEMOCRACY, Burstein periodizes and knits together the diverse strands of the sentimental and mythical rhetoric of the revolutionary generation and two post-revolutionary generations immediately following. He shows how Americans adopted and modified the language of sensibility of the Sternean sentimental novel, the Protestant rhetoric of individual responsibility, and the Lockean language of personal freedom as a way to justify the break with England, what later came to be the quasi-mystical core of what has sometimes been called the "American Creed."

He works hard to note shifts and modifications in the discourse according to internal and external threats. For example, he examines the beginning of "paranoid" era that began as factionalism crept into Washington's cabinet as Jefferson and Hamilton attempted to advance their very different views of the future of America. He notes the beginning of "manifest destiny" in the "Era of Good Feeling" which reflected the flexing of American muscle upon "winning" the War of 1812 He finishes up by taking us up through the Jacksonian era, where the discourse changed yet again as more citizens (men) were enfranchised, and discourse of the common man destroyed the elite Federalist appeals to aristocratic honor forever.

The American discourse initially partook of the notion of "sensibility" from Sterne, later from Crevouceur, modern "men of feeling" who displayed manly virtue balanced with warm-hearted sympathy and generosity. (Think of a perfect Jane Austen hero). To illustrate how the "man of feeling" was used by American patriots to articulate their rights to protest the abusive behavior of King George Burstein notes contemporary sources which articulated not just the language of the rights of Englishmen, but also the sentimental language of proper behavior, and manly fellow feeling. Burstein relates this evolving discourse through a lot of primary sources, including private letters, pamphlets, and key texts of the time such as writings by John Adams, Jefferson, Benjamin's Franklin and Rush.

Ultimately, the wide-ranging source material tends to sabotage the larger narrative about the changes in this discourse. It requires the maximum attention of the reader to recall how any given editorial or letter or historical document is being used to illustrate a certain period in the development and evolution of this language of feeling. Within a single paragraph, we may hear from Daniel Webster, a minor senator, a pastor and an editorialist. Too, sometimes the changes in rhetoric seem so small as to be very little different from the period immediately before or after. So while the overall point Burstein makes about how this romantic discourse served to engage the emotions, passions and the support of Americans against their colonial masters, and how later the populists like Jefferson and Jackson and their cohorts used a variation on this language when they scuttled Adams' presidency, and later the revitalized Whig/Federalists, the sheer number of sources and relatively small shifts in discourse sometimes induces frustration. Still it is a worthwhile and clearly important work that does fill a need in the history of the period. Interestingly, in many ways it is similar to AFFAIRS OF HONOR, both in terms of its thesis and density.

Two tidbits that I found particularly interesting in SENTIMENTAL DEMOCRACY: the persistence of the idea of the journey into the frontier of America as the journey into the 'realm of revelation,' (as dubbed recently by Furtwangler, the historian) a kind of sub-genre of the America as the Earthly Paradise genre. This is the sub-genre Lewis of Lewis & Clark used when he wrote up his notes as epiphanies, describing natural landmarks in mythic, epic language. Burstein is also good on the uses of the language of liberty and how is served as a screen (and still does) for imperial adventure. In speaking about the discourse of the frontier, Burstein's writes: "'...the rhetoric of happiness and liberty masked the assertion of raw, expansive power and the neglect of non-citizens' (Indian's) natural rights and moral welfare."

Further, he notes how this discourse served to create of the Indians, untrustworthy, inexplicable others: 'There was no safe place in republican America for a society [Indian society] that was not actively inventing the future...' This seems an apt commentary now, too. We hear it now most baldly in the hegemonic discourse of global business. To wit, an example heard every morning on National Public Radio, immediately following the business news, a show sponsored by General Electric: "At GE we believe knowing about the global economy is everybody's business." Prior to that, I recall they were bringing good things to life, another phrase that would fit very well into the 19th century rhetoric about the "taming" of the West and the "cultivation" of the frontier.

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4 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars A Solid Effort!, May 7, 2001
Andrew Burstein's book reveals an obscure but important thread in U.S. cultural history. His discussion of the "Man of Feeling" and the culture of sensibility provides important background for understanding the American Revolutionary period. Since documents such as the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States often are read out of context (if they are read at all), Burstein helps you understand what they meant to their contemporaries. Burstein is almost too thorough in surveying 18th and 19th century literature for examples, and the book is slow going at times. But he also tries to show how these ideas persist in America's self-image. His contemporary analysis is skimpy, though - such as his attempt to explain Hollywood screenwriting conventions in terms of sentimental democracy. However, we [...] recommend this book to anyone who wants to understand some of the subtleties behind the events of early American history.
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Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
masculine sentiment, political happiness
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
United States, New York, Great Britain, Stamp Act, John Adams, Man of Feeling, New England, Thomas Jefferson, George Washington, Benjamin Franklin, Fourth of July, Declaration of Independence, Boston Gazette, South Carolina, Continental Congress, Benjamin Rush, Daniel Boone, Noah Webster, Old World, Boston Massacre, Common Sense, Henry Clay, North America, British Americans, John Quincy Adams
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