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Hobbes, Sovereignty, and Early American Literature
About this book
Hobbes, Sovereignty, and Early American Literature pursues the question of democratic sovereignty as it was anticipated, theorized and resisted in the American colonies and in the early United States. It proposes that orthodox American liberal accounts of political community need to be supplemented and challenged by the deeply controversial theory of sovereignty that was articulated in Thomas Hobbes's Leviathan (1651). This book offers a radical re-evaluation of Hobbes's political theory and demonstrates how a renewed attention to key Hobbesian ideas might inform inventive re-readings of major American literary, religious and political texts. Ranging from seventeenth- and eighteenth-century Puritan attempts to theorize God's sovereignty to revolutionary and founding-era debates over popular sovereignty, this book argues that democratic aspiration still has much to learn from Hobbes's Leviathan and from the powerful liberal resistance it has repeatedly provoked.
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Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- Half title
- Series
- Title
- Copyright
- Epigraph
- Contents
- List of Figures
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Hobbes and the Golden Calf
- 1 Sovereignty's New Clothes
- 2 Rereading Leviathan: The "State of Nature" and the "Artificial Soul"
- 3 Hobbes in America
- 4 "Heaven's Sugar Cake": Puritan Sovereignty
- 5 Tyranny's Corpse: Jonathan Mayhew's Revolutionary Sermon on Romans 13
- 6 "Imperium in Imperio": Founding Sovereignty
- 7 Tar and Feathers: Hawthorne's Revolution
- 8 Hobbes, Slavery, and Sovereign Resistance
- 9 Nat Turner and the African American Revolution
- Notes
- Works Cited
- Index