Declaring independence : the origin and influence of America's founding document
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Bibliographic Information
Declaring independence : the origin and influence of America's founding document
University of Virginia Library, 2008
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Note
"Featuring the Albert H. Small Declaration of Independence Collection"
Preface: David McCullough ; essays: David Armitage, Pauline Maier, Robert M.S.McDonald, and Robert G. Parkinson ; epilogue: Justice Sandra Day O'Connor
Includes bibliographical references
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This title features the Albert H. Small Declaration of Independence Collection at the University of Virginia Library.The Declaration of Independence is the touchstone of American nationhood, the document that marks the beginning of our history as a people. Eloquently articulating the principles and sentiments that drove patriotic subjects of King George III to resistance and revolution, the Declaration has served as a sacred text for subsequent generations of Americans.This volume asks us to reread and rethink our founding document. The Declaration as we now understand it - the stirring passages that define our democratic creed - is not the Declaration that Thomas Jefferson and his congressional colleagues drafted, nor the document that inspired or provoked contemporaneous readers and listeners at home and abroad.Essays by four of the Declaration's leading students - David Armitage, Pauline Maier, Robert M. S. McDonald, and Robert G. Parkinson - make the historic text come alive, enabling us to hear what it had to say in its own time and what it might have to say to us today. Copiously illustrated with selections from the Albert H.
Small Declaration of Independence Collection at the University of Virginia and complemented by biographical sketches of the Declaration signers, this volume offers a rich resource for discovering the origin and influence of America's founding document.
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