A Nation Forged by Crisis
A New American History
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- $16.99
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- $16.99
Publisher Description
A concise new history of the United States revealing that crises -- not unlike those of the present day -- have determined our nation's course from the start
In A Nation Forged by Crisis, historian Jay Sexton contends that our national narrative is not one of halting yet inevitable progress, but of repeated disruptions brought about by shifts in the international system. Sexton shows that the American Revolution was a consequence of the increasing integration of the British and American economies; that a necessary precondition for the Civil War was the absence, for the first time in decades, of foreign threats; and that we cannot understand the New Deal without examining the role of European immigrants and their offspring in transforming the Democratic Party.
A necessary corrective to conventional narratives of American history, A Nation Forged by Crisis argues that we can only prepare for our unpredictable future by first acknowledging the contingencies of our collective past.
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Sexton, a historian of American politics, organizes his astute history around "the greatest periods of crisis in each century of its existence," which he describes metaphorically as "violent earthquakes that forever altered the nation's political landscape." First, Sexton emphasizes the skill with which the founding generation allowed the newly independent U.S. to engage economically with European nations while remaining aloof from their political machinations. He then moves on to explore the international context that informed the sharpening tensions over slavery in the mid-19th century, particularly the rise of a British ideology of free trade and the influx of Irish immigrants into the cities of the northern U.S. After arguing that Union victory and the abolition of slavery allowed the U.S. to profit from an increasingly globalized economy, Sexton offers a lengthy and detailed discussion of the nation's turn away from the isolationism of the 1920s to internationalism in the 1940s, along with the belief that, as an economic dynamo that had avoided both communism and fascism, the country was "exceptional." Claiming that, in the current unsettled times, Americans should "revisit previous moments of crisis," Sexton's book offers an insightful roadmap of how the country got here.