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The Politicians and the Egalitarians: The Hidden History of American Politics Hardcover – May 17, 2016
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Sean Wilentz
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Sean Wilentz
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Print length384 pages
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LanguageEnglish
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PublisherW. W. Norton & Company
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Publication dateMay 17, 2016
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Dimensions6.6 x 1.3 x 9.6 inches
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ISBN-100393285022
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ISBN-13978-0393285024
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Editorial Reviews
Review
"Engrossing and deeply enriching…Wilentz the historian is visiting the past to send a message to those of us who live in the 21st century."
― Los Angeles Times
"A shrewd and engaging assessment of the variable American tradition of egalitarianism, particularly as manifested in the political lives of Thomas Jefferson, John Quincy Adams, John Brown, Abraham Lincoln, right up through Lyndon Johnson and his Great Society―scrupulously detailed, elegantly written, incisively argued, and effectively combative."
― Philip Roth
"A bracing and persuasive defense of political partisanship as essential to a functioning democracy, and a timely reminder that from the country’s earliest days, political struggle has been the most effective mechanism for moving America toward the egalitarian ideals enunciated in its founding documents. It is a message that American citizens should never forget."
― Annette Gordon-Reed
"Sean Wilentz is a rare historian who writes with confidence about the entire scope of American history and who does so in a way accessible to a broad reading public. The Politicians & the Egalitarians, like his previous books, is sure to command attention."
― Eric Foner
"Wilentz evinces a vast knowledge of the American past while exploring, in his unique way, the interplay between raw party politics and the ebb and flow of reform efforts. In offering his take on pivotal figures from Jefferson to Du Bois, Lincoln to LBJ, Wilentz challenges us to debate history and ideas in a way that honors the best of the democratic system he has written about so provocatively throughout his career. Even when I most disagree with him, his arguments are always vigorous and passionate, lively and engaging."
― Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
"This stimulating book provides a major new interpretation of the alliance between egalitarian social movements and partisan politics to achieve some of the most notable liberal victories in the American past. Sean Wilentz has done more than anyone else to blend social and political history in a manner that offers powerful new insights."
― James M. McPherson
― Los Angeles Times
"A shrewd and engaging assessment of the variable American tradition of egalitarianism, particularly as manifested in the political lives of Thomas Jefferson, John Quincy Adams, John Brown, Abraham Lincoln, right up through Lyndon Johnson and his Great Society―scrupulously detailed, elegantly written, incisively argued, and effectively combative."
― Philip Roth
"A bracing and persuasive defense of political partisanship as essential to a functioning democracy, and a timely reminder that from the country’s earliest days, political struggle has been the most effective mechanism for moving America toward the egalitarian ideals enunciated in its founding documents. It is a message that American citizens should never forget."
― Annette Gordon-Reed
"Sean Wilentz is a rare historian who writes with confidence about the entire scope of American history and who does so in a way accessible to a broad reading public. The Politicians & the Egalitarians, like his previous books, is sure to command attention."
― Eric Foner
"Wilentz evinces a vast knowledge of the American past while exploring, in his unique way, the interplay between raw party politics and the ebb and flow of reform efforts. In offering his take on pivotal figures from Jefferson to Du Bois, Lincoln to LBJ, Wilentz challenges us to debate history and ideas in a way that honors the best of the democratic system he has written about so provocatively throughout his career. Even when I most disagree with him, his arguments are always vigorous and passionate, lively and engaging."
― Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
"This stimulating book provides a major new interpretation of the alliance between egalitarian social movements and partisan politics to achieve some of the most notable liberal victories in the American past. Sean Wilentz has done more than anyone else to blend social and political history in a manner that offers powerful new insights."
― James M. McPherson
About the Author
Sean Wilentz is the George Henry Davis 1886 Professor of American History at Princeton University and author of the Bancroft Prize–winning The Rise of American Democracy, Bob Dylan in America, and many other works. He is completing his next book, No Property in Man, on slavery, antislavery, and the Constitution, based on his Nathan I. Huggins Lectures delivered at Harvard in 2015.
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Product details
- Publisher : W. W. Norton & Company; 1st edition (May 17, 2016)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 384 pages
- ISBN-10 : 0393285022
- ISBN-13 : 978-0393285024
- Item Weight : 1.51 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.6 x 1.3 x 9.6 inches
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Best Sellers Rank:
#1,519,864 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #1,194 in Political Advocacy Books
- #1,395 in Political Parties (Books)
- #3,121 in Human Rights (Books)
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Reviewed in the United States on February 27, 2019
Verified Purchase
Sean Wilentz is a very insightful author. He studies his subjects thoroughly before he puts his thoughts down on paper. He is not afraid to admit when he has had a mistaken concept in previous thought (which is refreshing in his career field). The "deep state" is well represented in this book. Its foundations and growth are well displayed. The elected officials are our representatives, should lead based on their constituents, but they find themselves constantly seeking funding "for the next run". So they rely on those they appoint to make decisions that our elected reps should be making. There is no accountability for the appointed as there is for the elected (and unfortunately, there is very little of that from the electorate). Wilentz's has a strong grasp of the under belly of politics but at times he trends towards the leftist philosophy in his observations. Recommend this book to all seeking to not only learn the history of our government operations but to see what direction it is being lead if we do not "wake up" and address the need to limit the power and influence of the non-elected government bureaucracy.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 27, 2018
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I've read the "The Rise of American Democracy: Jefferson to Lincoln" which was one of better history books of the early 2000s for me. Thus I've always meant to read his new book when it came out, expecting it to be a sequel to the "Rise."
This rather disappointing book was an unpleasant surprise. After reading this book, instead of book about examination of the Politicians (down to earth realism) and Egalitarians (more cerebral and idealistic advocates), this is a polemic against historians whom Sean Wilentz does not think highly or thinks have had errors in their methodology.
This is a deeply limited book where the general reader without grounding in historiography and trends of American Historical currents will not benefit much.
This rather disappointing book was an unpleasant surprise. After reading this book, instead of book about examination of the Politicians (down to earth realism) and Egalitarians (more cerebral and idealistic advocates), this is a polemic against historians whom Sean Wilentz does not think highly or thinks have had errors in their methodology.
This is a deeply limited book where the general reader without grounding in historiography and trends of American Historical currents will not benefit much.
3 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on December 22, 2018
Verified Purchase
Of all the Wilentz books I have read this is easily the most enjoyable and still equally as informative and enlightening. Sean’s downfall will always be that he is overly verbose and needlessly “showy” with his vernacular displays. However, this book is less ostentatious in its writing and much more human in its expressions. It is a treat to watch him carefully craft and dissect the works of other authors to show specific instances where they have misinterpreted or purposefully prevaricated in order to purvey arguments without true merits in history. He is like a boxer taking down one opponent after another, exceptional!! Meanwhile, the main theme of the book travels through each era in United States history utilizing in depth primary source material and sharply crafted layered arguments to show the effects of myriad individuals in promoting egalitarian ideals through our political system of faction and party politics.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2016
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Sean Wilentz is widely regarded as one of America’s foremost political historians, he has also been dubbed by National Review as the new Arthur Schlesinger. Wilentz is a liberal of both the “classical” and “modern” variety, that is—like myself—he views the classical liberalism of Locke, Jefferson, and Adams as the natural starting point for the evolution of liberalism through Andrew Jackson, Abraham Lincoln, to Woodrow Wilson and Franklin Roosevelt. This is a widely accepted understanding of liberalism in philosophy and history.
In “The Politicians & the Egalitarians,” Wilentz’s work is two-fold. First, he attempts to discredit leftist/postmodern/neo-Marxist historians, as well as "new conservative" historians who have portrayed Jefferson and Jackson (two of Wilentz’s heroes) in as worst possible light as possible (both sides, ironically, have a newfound affinity for Alexander Hamilton and the Federalists albeit for different reasons). He also assails the revisionist histories that claim slavery is part of America’s natural institutional superstructure (mostly post-Marxist histories). Wilentz highlights how the Constitution, although it did not abolish slavery, dealt crushing defeats to pro-slavery advocates. The infamous 3/5 clause was, in fact, something deeply progressive all things considered. Pro-slavery advocates wanted the Constitution to recognize slaves as property. This was defeated. In place, and to ensure southern support for the constitution, the 3/5 clause was adopted—but instead of recognizing slaves as property, it recognized (certainly improperly and crudely) slaves as people (3/5 at least).
He also assails leftist historians, like Michael Kazin of Georgetown (and an editor of Dissent Magazine) for over inflating the role that socialists and communists and other leftists have played throughout history, while negating the real triumphs of economic and political reform as occurring when liberals decided to act upon the necessity of reform. (Here, it should be pointed out that—unlike on Fox News or National Review—there is a strong distinction between political leftism and political liberalism even if the two sometimes seem to overlap). The triumphs of labor and civil rights, although leftists were long battling for reform in these areas, were more the result of liberal accommodation and reform than it was the long proletariat struggle against oppression and injustice.
Scattered throughout Wilentz’s work is, as one reviewer already mentioned, a running commentary on American Historiography. Wilentz seeks to reclaim the Jefferson-Jackson-Wilson-FDR historiographical tradition that was once widely accepted in American history. Even 1950s conservatives had little love for Jefferson and Jackson whom they rightly saw as providing their intellectual basis for egalitarian reform and the rise of mass democracy (concepts that a conservative like Alexander Hamilton deeply deplored, even if he was more “progressive” when it came to issues like race and slavery). Wilentz is therefore trying to re-articulate his Bancroft Prize winning history “ The Rise of American Democracy: Jefferson to Lincoln ”, which again tried to defend Jefferson and Jackson as the originators of American democracy and our tradition for political reform against their critics who assail them as nothing more than idealistic racists, slave-owners, and genocidal maniacs.
Apart from being a running commentary on historiography, Wilentz’s work is also hyper-partisan. Wilentz claims, and rightly so, that American political history has always been deeply partisan—even from the foundation of our country. The talk of bipartisanship is really a recent phenomenon brought on, in part, because of the Cold War and the necessity that both parties had to work together to confront and contain the Soviet Union and help rebuild a decimated Western Europe and Japan (therefore also keeping these regions out of Soviet influence). The end of the Cold War has allowed for partisan politics to continue again since the United States no longer faces a global threat that demanded bipartisanship and moderation (we can argue to what extent Islamism is a threat—it certainly isn’t global, at least not on the same level as the Soviet Union was).
Thus, Wilentz’s work is also a commentary against the preachers of “post-partisanship” (Obama) and bi-partisanship and moderation. All of the historical case studies Wilentz highlights are moments of extreme partisanship: ratifying the Constitution, slavery/abolition, New Deal, and Great Society. Implicit throughout Wilentz’s work is a soft-Clintonism (he is, and has been, a friend a strong supporter of the Clinton’s throughout his career—thus earning him the label from NR as the new Arthur Schlesinger).
Whatever shortcomings Wilentz has as a partisan advocate, his history is true to American history. Regardless of if you agree with his politics, Wilentz has once again written an accessible work on American political history. Note, however, this is not really a scholarly work since it is bereft of footnotes—it is a popular work that can easily be digested from experts to laypersons alike.
Among the recent works of American political history and historiography, this stands near the top of the mountain. It is highly recommended, and will likely challenge (if not offend) some of the most deeply held beliefs (imaginary or not) of conservatives, leftists, and liberals all alike. He offers much for consideration.
In “The Politicians & the Egalitarians,” Wilentz’s work is two-fold. First, he attempts to discredit leftist/postmodern/neo-Marxist historians, as well as "new conservative" historians who have portrayed Jefferson and Jackson (two of Wilentz’s heroes) in as worst possible light as possible (both sides, ironically, have a newfound affinity for Alexander Hamilton and the Federalists albeit for different reasons). He also assails the revisionist histories that claim slavery is part of America’s natural institutional superstructure (mostly post-Marxist histories). Wilentz highlights how the Constitution, although it did not abolish slavery, dealt crushing defeats to pro-slavery advocates. The infamous 3/5 clause was, in fact, something deeply progressive all things considered. Pro-slavery advocates wanted the Constitution to recognize slaves as property. This was defeated. In place, and to ensure southern support for the constitution, the 3/5 clause was adopted—but instead of recognizing slaves as property, it recognized (certainly improperly and crudely) slaves as people (3/5 at least).
He also assails leftist historians, like Michael Kazin of Georgetown (and an editor of Dissent Magazine) for over inflating the role that socialists and communists and other leftists have played throughout history, while negating the real triumphs of economic and political reform as occurring when liberals decided to act upon the necessity of reform. (Here, it should be pointed out that—unlike on Fox News or National Review—there is a strong distinction between political leftism and political liberalism even if the two sometimes seem to overlap). The triumphs of labor and civil rights, although leftists were long battling for reform in these areas, were more the result of liberal accommodation and reform than it was the long proletariat struggle against oppression and injustice.
Scattered throughout Wilentz’s work is, as one reviewer already mentioned, a running commentary on American Historiography. Wilentz seeks to reclaim the Jefferson-Jackson-Wilson-FDR historiographical tradition that was once widely accepted in American history. Even 1950s conservatives had little love for Jefferson and Jackson whom they rightly saw as providing their intellectual basis for egalitarian reform and the rise of mass democracy (concepts that a conservative like Alexander Hamilton deeply deplored, even if he was more “progressive” when it came to issues like race and slavery). Wilentz is therefore trying to re-articulate his Bancroft Prize winning history “ The Rise of American Democracy: Jefferson to Lincoln ”, which again tried to defend Jefferson and Jackson as the originators of American democracy and our tradition for political reform against their critics who assail them as nothing more than idealistic racists, slave-owners, and genocidal maniacs.
Apart from being a running commentary on historiography, Wilentz’s work is also hyper-partisan. Wilentz claims, and rightly so, that American political history has always been deeply partisan—even from the foundation of our country. The talk of bipartisanship is really a recent phenomenon brought on, in part, because of the Cold War and the necessity that both parties had to work together to confront and contain the Soviet Union and help rebuild a decimated Western Europe and Japan (therefore also keeping these regions out of Soviet influence). The end of the Cold War has allowed for partisan politics to continue again since the United States no longer faces a global threat that demanded bipartisanship and moderation (we can argue to what extent Islamism is a threat—it certainly isn’t global, at least not on the same level as the Soviet Union was).
Thus, Wilentz’s work is also a commentary against the preachers of “post-partisanship” (Obama) and bi-partisanship and moderation. All of the historical case studies Wilentz highlights are moments of extreme partisanship: ratifying the Constitution, slavery/abolition, New Deal, and Great Society. Implicit throughout Wilentz’s work is a soft-Clintonism (he is, and has been, a friend a strong supporter of the Clinton’s throughout his career—thus earning him the label from NR as the new Arthur Schlesinger).
Whatever shortcomings Wilentz has as a partisan advocate, his history is true to American history. Regardless of if you agree with his politics, Wilentz has once again written an accessible work on American political history. Note, however, this is not really a scholarly work since it is bereft of footnotes—it is a popular work that can easily be digested from experts to laypersons alike.
Among the recent works of American political history and historiography, this stands near the top of the mountain. It is highly recommended, and will likely challenge (if not offend) some of the most deeply held beliefs (imaginary or not) of conservatives, leftists, and liberals all alike. He offers much for consideration.
25 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 22, 2016
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The author claims to be making a case for politics over egalitarians tut his arguement is not totally convincing. It is a worthwhile read even if it is longer than it needs to be which seems to be the case with most books these days. One might think the publishers are paying by the page.
Jim Murray.
Jim Murray.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 7, 2016
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Very briefly, excellent analysis of public policy of significant transformative presidents: Lincoln, Jackson. Historian Wilentz understands the basics of politican science better than most other historians, very comparable to Schlesinger or Hofstadter.
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Reviewed in the United States on July 11, 2016
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Wonderful book. Examines US history: Revolution to FDR. Focuses on the difference between rabble rousing and actually getting something accomplished politically. Example: John Brown versus Abraham Lincoln.
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