
- 296 pages
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About this book
The Young Americans were a nationalist movement within the Democratic Party made up of writers and politicians associated with the New York periodical, the Democratic Review. In this revealing book, Mark Power Smith explores the ways in whichâin dialogue with its criticsâthe movement forged contrasting visions of American nationalism in the decades leading up to the Civil War.
Frustrated, fifty years after independence, by Britain's political and cultural influence on the United States, the Young Americans drew on a wide variety of intellectual authoritiesâin the fields of literature, political science, phrenology and international lawâto tie popular sovereignty for white men to the universalist idea of natural rights. The movement supported a noxious program of foreign interventionism, racial segregation, and cultural nationalism. What united these policies was a new view of national allegiance: one that saw democracy and free trade not as political privileges but as natural rights for white men.
Despite its national reach, this view of the Union inadvertently turned Northern and Southern states against each other, helping to cultivate the conditions for the Civil War. In the end, the Young America movement was ultimately consumed by the sectional ideologies it had brought into being.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction: Young America Democratsâthe Post-Jacksonian Generation
- 1. The Intellectual Culture of the Young America Movement, 1844â1854
- 2. The Dorr Rebellion: Democracy, Natural Rights, and the Domestic Politics of the 1840s
- 3. Global Transformations: Territorial Expansion and Democratic Politics
- 4. Nature and the Political Order: Young America and the European Revolutions of 1848
- 5. Cuban Annexation and the Problem of Slavery
- 6. A State of Nature: Slavery and the Crisis of Democracy, 1854â1857
- 7. Popular Sovereignty and the Struggle against Slavery, 1857â1861
- Conclusion: Liberal Nationalism in an Age of Civil Wars
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Index