Demos Assembled

Regular price €36.50
17th century
1800s
1840s
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1870s
A01=Stephen W. Sawyer
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analysis
Author_Stephen W. Sawyer
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college
conflict
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critical
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democracy
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europe
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france
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Language_English
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political
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regime
renaissance
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revolutionary
softlaunch
state
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Product details

  • ISBN 9780226833392
  • Weight: 367g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Jun 2024
  • Publisher: The University of Chicago Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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An intelligent, engaging, and in-depth reading of the nature of the state and the establishment of the modern political order in the mid-nineteenth century.

Previous studies have covered in great detail how the modern state slowly emerged from the early Renaissance through the seventeenth century, but we know relatively little about the next great act: the birth and transformation of the modern democratic state. And in an era where our democratic institutions are rife with conflict, it’s more important now than ever to understand how our institutions came into being.

Stephen W. Sawyer’s Demos Assembled provides us with a fresh, transatlantic understanding of that political order’s genesis. While the French influence on American political development is well understood, Sawyer sheds new light on the subsequent reciprocal influence that American thinkers and politicians had on the establishment of post-revolutionary regimes in France. He argues that the emergence of the stable Third Republic (1870–1940), which is typically said to have been driven by idiosyncratic internal factors, was in fact a deeply transnational, dynamic phenomenon. Sawyer’s findings reach beyond their historical moment, speaking broadly to conceptions of state formation: how contingent claims to authority, whether grounded in violence or appeals to reason and common cause, take form as stateness.
Stephen W. Sawyer is professor and chair of history, cofounder of the History, Law, and Society Program, and director of the Center for Critical Democracy Studies at the American University of Paris. He is editor of the Tocqueville Review and associate editor of the Annales. History and Social Sciences. He is coeditor of Boundaries of the State in US History and translator of Michel Foucault’s Wrong Doing, Truth Telling, also published by the University of Chicago Press.