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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 4 page paper which examines how American, in the 19th century, became a nation that was far different from the one that the revolutionary fathers envisioned. The argument is examined through Gordon S. Wood’s work “The Radicalism of the American Revolution.” No additional sources cited.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: JR7_RAwoodam.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
history, discussing the ideals held by the revolutionary fathers and the ideals that changed. At one point he notes that by the early part of the 19th century the nation
had become the "most egalitarian, most materialistic, most individualistic- and most evangelical Christian-society in western History" (Wood 230). Although the nation is based on the ideals of the revolutionary
leaders, there are concerns that the nation has taken a clear turn from the ideals of freedom and unity. The following paper examines this perspective as seen in Wo
The Radicalism of the American Revolution Throughout Woods book we see how he illustrates that the revolutionary leaders were men who sought a greater sense of enlightenment than had previously
been seen in the rest of the world. The idea was to take many of the noble ideals upheld by the great philosophers of the past and truly create a
nation that was successful and noble. In the beginning Wood illustrates that the new nation was trying to put an end to the power of monarchy for in monarchy
the individual was not important. For example, in chapter 6 of Woods work we see him illustrate how the relationships associated with monarchy in the 18th century were replaced with
more democratic, liberal and capitalistic visions of the 19th century (Wood 95). With republicanism we see that such things as inequality and dependency on the monarchy was challenged. Wood
also illustrates how the general economic condition of the United States was quite different as people began working hard to gain little extra things in their life. As a result
the middle class began to grow and people saw success. And, at the same time, without the true hold of the English church, the people of the new land gradually
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