"If that contention remains startling, we can thank an immense effort, carried out over generations, to throw out not only Beard's particular economic interpretation of the convention, but along with it any suggestion that struggles between elites and ordinary Americans over public and private finance played a role in framing our Constitution. It's not surprising that many of the popular founding father biographers routinely avoid the issue. But entire careers in academic history--major ones, like Edmund Morgan's--have been largely dedicated to depicting a founding generation acting with perfect intellectual consistency almost entirely on principle. Wherever self-interest did arise, Morgan suggests (in his popular book "The Birth of the Republic" and elsewhere), the nature of the founding mission was such that it enabled even greed to inspire the founders to good. In that kind of history, everyday political struggles over money between ordinary Americans and American elites just don't play.
William Hogeland in Salon revives Charles Beard's account of the 1787 Constitutional Convention.
Wednesday, April 06, 2011
"Debunking Beard Is Full of Bunk"
Labels:
1780s,
Beard,
historians,
legal history,
political history
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