Constitution's Penman e-bog
348,37 DKK
(inkl. moms 435,46 DKK)
Strikingly few Americans know who wrote the Constitution. Even fewer know that he was a peg-legged ladies man with a wicked sense of humor, a staunch opponent of slavery, and an unabashed elitist. Gouverneur Morris, who has been described as the most colorful man in North America at the time of the founding, was a dominant figure at the Philadelphia Convention of 1787. In fact, he spoke more of...
E-bog
348,37 DKK
Forlag
University Press of Kansas
Udgivet
31 oktober 2023
Genrer
1KBB
Sprog
English
Format
epub
Beskyttelse
LCP
ISBN
9780700634156
Strikingly few Americans know who wrote the Constitution. Even fewer know that he was a peg-legged ladies man with a wicked sense of humor, a staunch opponent of slavery, and an unabashed elitist. Gouverneur Morris, who has been described as the most colorful man in North America at the time of the founding, was a dominant figure at the Philadelphia Convention of 1787. In fact, he spoke more often, proposed more motions, and had more motions adopted than any other delegate. He also put the Constitution into its final form, choosing the arrangement and much of the wording of its provisions, not to mention composing the famous preamble (We the People of the United States . . .) nearly from scratch. The Constitutions Penman is the first book to explore the constitutional vision of this fascinating, neglected, and influential American.As Dennis Rasmussen deftly shows, some aspects of Morriss political thought were intriguingly idiosyncratic, such as his argument that the Senate should be an aristocratic body whose members would serve life terms without pay. Other aspects of his vision for Americas constitutional order, however, were astoundingly prescient. Morris saw as clearly as any of the framers the need for a powerful executive with a popular mandate, the central role that parties would play in American politics, and the unfathomable evils that slavery would visit on American life. Rasmussen demonstrates that it is impossible to fully understand the Constitution without appreciating the central role that Morris played in shaping it.