Long before the "one percent" became a protest slogan, American founding father John Adams feared the power of a class he called simply "the few"—the wellborn, the beautiful, and especially the rich. In John Adams and the Fear of American Oligarchy, Luke Mayville explores Adams’s deep concern with the way in which inequality threatens to corrode democracy and empower a small elite. Adams believed that wealth is politically powerful not merely because money buys influence, but also because citizens admire and even identify with the rich. Mayville explores Adams’s theory of wealth and power in the context of his broader concern about social and economic disparities—reflections that promise to illuminate contemporary debates about inequality and its political consequences. He also examines Adams’s ideas about how oligarchy might be countered. A compelling work of intellectual history, John Adams and the Fear of American Oligarchy has important lessons for today’s world.
Only the four royal governors south of the Potomac, Virginia's Lord Dunmore, North Carolina's Josiah Martin, South Carolina's Lord William Campbell, and Georgia's James Wright, forcibly resisted the rebellion, but each was driven from ...
The Warren-Adams friendship grew strong over the trying decade of their colony's confrontation with London.” These were already, as Thomas Paine was to record, the times that tried men's souls. In mid-April 1775, Dr. Warren dispatched ...
Cover -- Half title -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- ONE.
Formisano delves into the work of not just politicians but lobbyists, consultants, appointed bureaucrats, pollsters, celebrity journalists, behind-the-scenes billionaires, and others.
The author of the bestselling The Founding Brothers and The Quartet now gives a deeply insightful examination of the relevance of Jefferson's, Madison's, and Adams's views to some of the most divisive issues in American politics and society ...
Cowen, Sylla, and Wright credit Hamilton with having developed “Bagehot's rules” for financial-crisis management nearly a century before they were compiled by their namesake, Walter Bagehot. Cowen, Sylla, and Wright, “The U.S. Panic of ...
Norman Graebner, Empire on the Pacific: A Study in American Continental Expansionism (1955; Santa Barbara, 1983), viii. Graebner writes: “It was the Pacific Ocean that determined the territorial goals of all American presidents from ...
... the pseudonymous “Harrington” thought that “'His Majesty elect,' or 'His elective Majesty, G. W. President of the United States'” would place the president on “an equality with any crowned head upon earth, and add dignity, ...
Juxtaposing his ideas with his character, this book sets him within intersecting contexts - personal, regional, lawyerly, political, and intellectual - that shaped his vision of the world and of his place in it. 5 Setting Adams in context ...
A New York Times Book Review Notable Book of 2017 A Wall Street Journal Best Book of 2017 From the great historian of the American Revolution, New York Times-bestselling and Pulitzer-winning Gordon Wood, comes a majestic dual biography of ...