The great tradition : constitutional history and national identity in Britain and the United States, 1870-1960
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The great tradition : constitutional history and national identity in Britain and the United States, 1870-1960
Stanford University Press, 2007
- : cloth
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Note
Bibliography: p. [295]-333
Includes index
http://www.loc.gov/catdir/toc/ecip072/2006033689.html
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The Great Tradition traces the way in which English constitutional history became a major factor in the development of a national identity that took for granted the superiority of the English as a governing race. In the United States, constitutional history also became an aspect of the United States's self-definition as a nation governed by law. The book's importance lies in the way constitutional history interpreted the past to create a favorable self-image for each country. It deals with constitutional history as a justification for empire, a model for the emergent academic history of the 1870s, a surrogate for political argument in the guise of scholarship, and an element that contributed to the Anglo-American rapprochement before World War I. The book also traces the rise and decline of constitutional history as a fashionable sub-discipline within the academy.
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