Foreign Affairs and the Founding Fathers

From Confederation to Constitution, 1776–1787

Richard Dean Burns author Joseph M Siracusa author Norman A Graebner author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Bloomsbury Publishing PLC

Published:1st Nov '11

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Foreign Affairs and the Founding Fathers cover

This concise diplomatic history of the Confederation era is the first new work on the topic in a generation. In its pages, three distinguished diplomatic historians offer a realist interpretation of the way in which the Founding Fathers conducted foreign affairs, refreshing our collective memory about their priorities and their values. When three of the nation's leading historians come together to fashion a fresh study of American history, the resulting work cannot help but be a monumental addition to the field. Foreign Affairs and the Founding Fathers: From Confederation to Constitution, 1776–1787 is such a work. These eminent scholars provide a thoughtful, realist interpretation of the Founders' view of America's place in the world, delivering a timely reassessment of their aspirations, thoughts, and actions during the seminal decades of the American nation. This book takes readers backstage where they can eavesdrop on the Founders to better understand their motives and intentions and see how they responded to threats and problems associated with America's place in the world. Arguing that the Founding Fathers essentially thought and acted in terms of power—ranking matters of national interest and security over ideology and moral concerns—the book sheds new light on the foreign policy opportunities and challenges of the day, as the Founders weighed and determined them. In so doing, it offers important guideposts for our own time.

Foreign Affairs and the Founding Fathers is a short, wellwritten, and engaging narrative that uses the available primary sources to good effect. Based on early essays, lectures, and scholarly articles by the late, and prolific, historian Norman Graebner, this book introduces the reader to the key dilemmas, events, and proposed solutions to the vexing questions noted above. . . . this is a good, solid introduction to the diplomacy of the Confederation period. * H-Diplo *
This first-rate study is a must acquisition for academic and public libraries. Summing Up: Essential. All levels/libraries. * Choice *

  • Winner of 2012 Outstanding Academic Title 2013

ISBN: 9780313398261

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 595g

224 pages