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The Making Of Tocqueville's “democracy In America”
James T. Schleifer

The Making Of Tocqueville's “democracy In America”

Liberty Fund (May 01, 2000)
9780865972056
| Paperback
437 pages | 152 x 221 mm | English
Dewey 306.2
LC Classification JK216.T7193 .S33 1999
LC Control No. 99025721

Genre

  • Non-Fiction
  • Politics

Subject

  • Constitutional Law And History
  • Democracy
  • Legal History
  • Political Science / Political Ideologies / Democracy
  • Politics And Government

Plot

It is impossible to fully understand the American experience apart from Alexis de Tocqueville's Democracy in America. Moreover, it is impossible fully to appreciate Tocqueville by assuming that he brought to his visitation to America, or to the writing of his great work, a fixed philosophical doctrine. James T. Schleifer documents where, when, and under what influences Tocqueville wrote different sections of his work. In doing so, Schleifer discloses the mental processes through which Tocqueville passed in reflecting on his experiences in America and transforming these reflections into the most original and revealing book ever written about Americans. For the first time the evolution of a number of Tocqueville's central themes - democracy, individualism, centralisation, despotism - emerges into clear relief. As Russell B. Nye has observed, "Schleifer's study is a model of intellectual history, an account of the intertwining of a man, a set of ideas, and the final product, a book." The Liberty Fund second edition includes a new preface by the author and an epilogue, "The Problem of the Two Democracies".