A Union of Interests
Political and Economic Thought in Revolutionary America
Cathy D. Matson and Peter S. Onuf
248 pages, 6 x 9
American Political Thought
Paper ISBN 978-0-7006-1110-2, $19.95
From the onset of the Revolution
in 1776 to the inauguration of the federal government in 1789,
the American political culture was transformed. The movement
for an effective continental republic is here linked to the groundswell
for development and economic freedom set off by the Revolution.
A Union of Interests reconstructs the discourse of American
federalism, a discourse grounded in the debate over the role
of government in the regulation of the economy.
Cathy Matson and Peter Onuf integrate analyses of economic
ideas and interests with many of the critical problems facing
the union after the war--such as jurisdictional disputes, threats
of secession, and new prospects for frontier settlement. The
revolutionary ideology that had justified the creation of sovereign
states under the Articles of Confederation seemed increasingly
"artificial" in light of the pressing need to create
a "natural," extended republic that would be truer
to the changing circumstances of the American people. The authors
demonstrate that the movement for the Constitution drew upon
increasingly popular political-economic ideas that sought to
reconcile the apparent conflicts between a national interest
and the "enlightened" self-interest of citizens. A
pivotal chapter argues that the Constitutional Convention was
itself both a product of this broad public discussion about America's
future and a contribution to it in which the founders debated
the limits to which they should compromise their distinct goals
to fit this emerging vision.
"This book is a major contribution to our understanding
of the history of the Confederation, of the emergence of a new
concept and structure of federalism, and of the relationship
of changing understandings of union to the evolving political
culture of the Revolutionary age. It is clearly written and characterized
by exhaustive, absolutely up-to-date research."--Lance
Banning, author of The Jeffersonian Persuasion: Evolution
of a Party Ideology
CATHY D. MATSON is associate professor of history at the
University of Delaware.
PETER S. ONUF is professor of history at the University
of Virginia and the author of Origins of the Federal Republic:
Jurisdictional Controversies in the United States, 1775-1787
and Statehood and Union: A History of the Northwest Ordinance.
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