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Founding Fractures: How Rival Visions Shaped Early America MTA
Constitutional debates, factional politics, and the making of the United States, 1763–1815
2nd Edition

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About this book:

Founding Fractures: How Rival Visions Shaped Early America *Founding Fractures: How Rival Visions Shaped Early America* offers a compelling narrative of the tumultuous half-century between the end of the Seven Years' War in 1763 and the conclusion of the War of 1812 in 1815. Moving beyond traditional hagiography, this book examines the formative years of the United States through the lens of deep-seated ideological, economic, and regional divisions. By tracing the persistent collisions between figures like Hamilton, Jefferson, Madison, and Adams, the text reveals how the American "founding" was not a single moment of unified consensus, but a series of fragile compromises forged in the heat of intense partisan conflict.

The book meticulously explores three recurring fault lines that continue to structure American political discourse today: the reach of federal versus state power, the moral and political catastrophe of slavery, and the competing interests of commerce and agrarianism. From the street protests of the Imperial Crisis and the failures of the Articles of Confederation to the high-stakes constitutional debates and the explosive partisan battles of the early republic, *Founding Fractures* shows how today’s political tensions are rooted in these early decisions. It provides a vivid account of pivotal events—such as Shays’s Rebellion, the Louisiana Purchase, and the Alien and Sedition Acts—to demonstrate how the fundamental questions of liberty and authority were never fully resolved, leaving a legacy of durable fractures that define the American polity to this day.

What You'll Find Inside:
  • The shift from 'salutary neglect' to active British imperial control after 1763 ignited constitutional debates over taxation, representation, and natural rights.
  • The Articles of Confederation highlighted a foundational American tension: the struggle to balance necessary federal authority with a deep-seated fear of centralized tyranny.
  • Compromises made during the 1787 Constitutional Convention, particularly regarding slavery and state representation, papered over deep-seated regional fractures to ensure national survival.
  • The emergence of the first political party system (Federalists vs. Democratic-Republicans) was driven by rival visions of economic interest, constitutional interpretation, and foreign policy.
  • Early 19th-century events like the Louisiana Purchase and the War of 1812 expanded the nation's borders while simultaneously intensifying sectional conflicts over the future of slavery.
Who's It For:

This book is designed for students of American history, political science enthusiasts, and engaged general readers interested in the origins of the U.S. political system. It is particularly beneficial for those seeking to understand how the foundational disputes of the late 18th century—such as federal vs. state power and economic regionalism—continue to structure modern political discourse. Educators and history buffs will find the narrative’s focus on primary sources and 'rival visions' a compelling way to revisit the nation's formative years.

Author:

Cynthia Jones

Published By:

MixCache.com


Date Published:

December 24, 2025

Word Count:

48,485 words

Reading Time:

3 hours 24 minutes

Sample:

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6 ratings