Empire of Liberty Audiolibro Por Gordon S. Wood arte de portada

Empire of Liberty

A History of the Early Republic

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Empire of Liberty

De: Gordon S. Wood
Narrado por: Robert Fass
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In Empire of Liberty, one of America's most esteemed historians, Gordon S. Wood, offers a brilliant account of the early American Republic, ranging from 1789 and the beginning of the national government to the end of the War of 1812.

As Wood reveals, the period was marked by tumultuous change in all aspects of American life - in politics, society, economy, and culture. The men who founded the new government had high hopes for the future, but few of their hopes and dreams worked out quite as they expected. They hated political parties but parties nonetheless emerged. Some wanted the United States to become a great fiscal-military state, like those of Britain and France; others wanted the country to remain a rural agricultural state very different from the European states. Instead, by 1815 the United States became something neither group anticipated. Named a New York Times Notable Book, Empire of Liberty, part of The Oxford History of the United States series, offers a marvelous account of this pivotal era when America took its first unsteady steps as a new and rapidly expanding nation.

The Oxford History of the United States is considered the gold standard for serious historians and general readers (and listeners) alike. Three of the titles have won the Pulitzer Prize for history; two have been Pulitzer Prize finalists, and all of them have enjoyed critical and commercial success.

Please note: The individual volumes of the series have not been published in historical order. Empire of Liberty is number IV in The Oxford History of the United States.

Listen to more of the definitive Oxford History of the United States.©2009 Gordon S. Wood (P)2009 Audible, Inc.
Historia estadounidense Ciencia Política Estados Unidos Historia y Teoría Política y Gobierno Libertad Américas Para reflexionar Gobierno Revolución y Fundación Guerra de 1812 Impuestos Inspirador Socialismo Edad media Reino Unido América Latina Early American History

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  • Audie Award Winner - Best History Audiobook, 2011

Comprehensive Historical Coverage • Illuminating Political Insights • Perfect Narration • Informative Cultural Analysis

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“In 1816…Congress enacted a duty on imported foreign books…. 'Our government,' declared the chairman of the Senate finance committee in defense of the tariff, 'is peculiar to ourselves, and our books of instruction should be adapted to the nature of the government and the genius of the people. In the best of foreign books we are liable to meet with criticism and comparisons not very flattering to the American people. In American editions of these, the offensive and illiberal parts are expunged or explained, and the work is adapted to the exigencies and tastes of the American reader. But withdraw the protection, our channels of instruction will be foreign.'"

Does the spirit of that sound strangely familiar? There is nothing new under the sun. At least not in the history of political discourse and strife in the United States. I’m not sure if listening to this extraordinarily enlightening history of the nation’s first quarter century left me more confident that what we have overcome in the past we can get through again or more depressed that after all these years we are still at one another's throats over the same issues. For ideologues there is ammunition here to defend every doctrinaire viewpoint about the true nature and genius of the American experiment. What I found most interesting, however, was the fact that all the parties to the struggle to define a nation which was still determining its own nature were at some point forced to act counter to their principled pronouncements, not for political considerations but simply because it became clear that to do otherwise would lead to a disaster born of stubborn consistency. In the end these men, and they were, sadly, all men, put the survival and welfare of the nation before their commitment to any inflexible philosophy of government.

It is also fascinating to find that the interests and factions of today were often allied or opposed in very different alignments during those early years, and the gradual shift in these alliances forms some of the central action of this historical account.

Perhaps the most valuable thing about Wood ’s book is the fact that there is no discernible bias in his account. This is ground where we can all meet and wonder at the events and actions which kept a very fragile ship of state off the rocks even before it seemed to be fully seaworthy. Impressively, it deals with every aspect of the American experience in those years, from foreign affairs to manufacturing to religion, education and the arts. It is a hugely worthwhile listen.

Unbiased, clear eyed history of our beginnings

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Somehow both the history of America's "great men" (read: Washington, Jefferson, Hamilton) and the history of a new nation and people at the same time. You really get a sense of how the Federalists and Democratic-Republicans shaped America and why different Americans were drawn to each movement. Well-written, and with great narration by Fass.

Definitive history of the Early Republic

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Wood has written a history period review that feels like an excellent novel. I can't remember a history account so full of startling explanations and analyses, and I thought I knew a lot about this era . Wood takes no standard assumptions for granted while sticking with solid factual evidence. He makes villains of actions and cultural mistakes, not personalities. He sees the prejudices and flaws of the times in context without passing judgment or evoking his own prejudices. Wow, this is a classic!

The narration is so perfect I thought Fass and Wood must be twins. Fass' enthusiasm and since of drama never overplay but always charm. BTW: I was led to this work by Wood's also-brilliant The Americanization of Benjamin Franklin.

Enlightening, brilliantly written

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I’ve been a great fan of Durant’s “History of Civilization” series, and was looking for a similarly thorough history of the United States. Having read several books regarding the Revolutionary War period, I skipped to volume 2 of the Oxford series on the history of the U.S.

I’m very impressed! This book examines the various aspects of American civilization for this period, including political, cultural, art, literature, and religion. The style is accessible, nonpartisan, and engaging. I’m looking forward to listening to the other volumes in this series.

Comprehensive analysis of the period

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A very enjoyable read. Dense detail covering a myriad of subjects about the early formation of our country. Gordon Wood covers the politics of the period, while bringing into the foreground the cultural development also, attending in detail matters of religion, women, slavery, education, the arts and military endeavors. At times the reading was a bit tedious though that level of detail is what made this the excellent read it is.

A comprehensive detailing of our young republic

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