American revolutions

a continental history, 1750-1804

No cover

Taylor, Alan: American revolutions (2016)

681 pages

English language

Published Nov. 6, 2016

ISBN:
978-0-393-08281-4
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OCLC Number:
937452505

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The American Revolution is often portrayed as a high-minded, orderly event whose capstone, the Constitution, provided the ideal framework for a democratic, prosperous nation. Alan Taylor, two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize, gives us a different creation story in this magisterial history of the nation's founding. Rising out of the continental rivalries of European empires and their native allies, Taylor's Revolution builds like a ground fire overspreading Britain's mainland colonies, fueled by local conditions, destructive, hard to quell. Conflict ignited on the frontier, where settlers clamored to push west into Indian lands against British restrictions, and in the seaboard cities, where commercial elites mobilized riots and boycotts to resist British tax policies. When war erupted, Patriot crowds harassed Loyalists and nonpartisans into compliance with their cause. Brutal guerrilla violence flared all along the frontier from New York to the Carolinas, fed by internal divisions as well as the clash with …

1 edition

Review of 'American revolutions' on 'Goodreads'

The revolutionary period as taught in American schools is pure fiction, in which the entire population of ‘the colonies’ (only 13 are worth mentioning) was unified in rebellion, based on fully formed republican ideals, against a tyrannical British establishment; Indians were either mindless savages or tragic figures with no political agency or agenda of their own; and the many other parties involved - the numerous colonies north and south of the rebellious 13, for example, and the Spanish empire to the west - were non-existent.

American historians, as well as others, have tried with varying degrees of success and various levels of bias to paint a fuller picture, but Taylor has outdone them all, in my view. Evaluating this period from a continental perspective allows him to consider a far more complex - and more interesting - tale, which he tells with a refreshing lack of American presupposition and in …

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Subjects

  • History

Places

  • United States