Amending America
If We Love the Constitution So Much, Why Do We Keep Trying
to Change It?
Richard B. Bernstein
with Jerome Agel
xix, 396 pages, 6 x 9
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-0715-0, $17.95
Even as we marvel at the grandeur
of our constitutional system, we can't resist tinkering with
it. Amending America tells the dramatic story of how,
over the past 206 years, the American people have reshaped the
Constitution to meet the country's changing needs. It describes
how we have adopted 27 amendments since 1789--and debated and
rejected 10,000 more.
A provocative examination of one of America's most important
yet least-known democratic tools, Amending America brings
to life events in our history that continue to resonate today
as, as various politicans have set their hearts on amendments
to balance the budget, to ban abortion, or to allow school prayer.
"A wonderful book. . . . A magnificent treasure trove
of American history."--Arthur R. Miller, Bruce Bromley
Professor of Law, Harvard Law School
"A skillfully rendered, comprehensive, and engaging study
of Article V's procedures for amending the Constitution."--Washington
Post
"Instructive and fascinating. The book is thorough, erudite,
and packed with the anecdotes that make our political past so
enjoyable to review."--Minneapolis Star Tribune
"Admirably illuminates the complex and remarkable history
of the American people's repeated attempts to amend the Constitution,
and captures that history's enduring significance."--William
E. Nelson, author of The Fourteenth Amendment: From Political
Principle to Judicial Doctrine
"Will amply repay its readers. Scholars of American constitutional
development should find the book a useful addition to their shelves;
general readers should find it an interesting and enjoyable way
to learn about some often overlooked aspects of American history."--Sanford
Levinson, History Book Club News
"Invaluable for just about anybody seeking to understand
the contradictions of our approach to constitutional government."--Herbert
S. Parmet, author of Richard Nixon and His America
"An intelligent, carefully researched, and highly readable
account."--Detroit News
"The authors have made our country's charter the centerpiece
of a suspenseful and still-unfolding national adventure."--Norfolk
Virginian-Pilot and Ledger-Star
"An anecdotal guide to the debates and conflicts over
each amendment."--Publishers Weekly
"A thoughtful history of the amendments of the Constitution
and an excellent delineation of issues debated by modern constitutional
scholars."--Kirkus Reviews
"An excellent work about an often-ignored issue. Recommended
for all libraries."--Library Journal
"A fresh and reassuring picture of a living, flexible
document strong enough to accept constant challenge and occasional
change. The amending process, used wisely, helps meet the needs
of an evolving nation. This is an unusual survey of this always-timely
process."--Anniston (Alabama) Star
"For a book with such a weighty subject, Amending
America is surprisingly entertaining and humorous."--Alan
Mass in the New York Law Journal
RICHARD B. BERNSTEIN, adjunct associate professor of
law at New York Law School, is the author or editor of twelve
books on American constitutional history, including Are We
to Be a Nation? The Making of the Constitution (with Kym
S. Rice) and Of the People, By the People, For the People
(with Jerome Agel).
JEROME AGEL has written and/or produced more than fifty
books, including collaborations with Carl Sagan, Marshall McLuhan,
Stanley Kubrick, and Isaac Asimov. His works include The U.S.
Constitution for Everyone.
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