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Library | Material Type | Item Barcode | Call Number | Shelf Location | Status | Item Holds |
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Searching... | Book | BILKUTUP0285921 | E169.1 .B654 2002 | Central Campus Library | Searching... | Searching... |
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Summary
Summary
In this sweeping reinterpretation of American political culture, James Block offers a new perspective on the formation of the modern American self and society. Block roots both self and society in the concept of agency, rather than liberty, and dispenses with the national myth of the "sacred cause of liberty"--with the Declaration of Independence as its "American scripture." Instead, he recovers the early modern conception of agency as the true synthesis emerging from America's Protestant and liberal cultural foundations.
Block traces agency doctrine from its pre-Commonwealth English origins through its development into the American mainstream culture on the eve of the twentieth century. The concept of agency that prevailed in the colonies simultaneously released individuals from traditional constraints to participate actively and self-reliantly in social institutions, while confining them within a new set of commitments. Individual initiative was now firmly bounded by the modern values and ends of personal Protestant religiosity and collective liberal institutional authority. As Block shows, this complex relation of self to society lies at the root of the American character.
A Nation of Agents is a new reading of what the "first new nation" did and did not achieve. It will enable us to move beyond long-standing national myths and grasp both the American achievement and its legacy for modernity.
Table of Contents
Preface | p. ix |
1 The American Narrative in Crisis | p. 1 |
I The English Origins of the American Self and Society | |
2 The Early Puritan Insurgents and the Origins of Agency | p. 39 |
3 The Protestant Revolutionaries and the Emerging Society of Agents | p. 69 |
4 Thomas Hobbes and the Founding of the Liberal Politics of Agency | p. 111 |
5 John Locke and the Mythic Society of Free Agents | p. 152 |
II The Ascendancy of Agency and the First New Nation | |
6 The Great Awakening and the Emergent Culture of Agency | p. 183 |
7 The Revolutionary Triumph of Agency | p. 233 |
III The Dilemma of Nationhood | |
8 The Liberal Idyll amidst Republican Realities | p. 299 |
9 From Liberation to Reversal in a World without Bounds | p. 332 |
IV The Creation of an Agency Civilization | |
10 National Revival as the Crucible of Agency Character | p. 369 |
11 From Sectarian Discord to Civil Religion | p. 424 |
12 The Protestant Agent in Liberal Economics | p. 459 |
13 John Dewey and the Modern Synthesis | p. 493 |
Conclusion: The Recovery of Agency | p. 537 |
Notes | p. 553 |
Index | p. 635 |