Liberty or Justice for All?
A Conversation across the American Centuries
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Georgia Press
Published:15th Jan '23
Currently unavailable, our supplier has not provided us a restock date
Should a virtuous society value the good of the community over individual freedom?
But if every citizen is guaranteed life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, does this mean America is a nation where the individual reigns supreme?
America’s young democracy soon found its prophet in Ralph Waldo Emerson, who preached a gospel of self-reliance, small government, and self-improvement.
A riveting story of faith, politics, and ideas, Liberty or Justice for All? brings to life four of America’s greatest thinkers, whose dialogue across the ages has never been more relevant. The book traces a striking pattern—the vexed relationship of individual liberty to inclusive social justice—in an elaborate fabric, woven over more than three centuries of American history.
Philip F. Gura begins his nimble tale with Jonathan Edwards, a fiery preacher who insisted that God would reward those who embraced social cooperation. One generation later, the Founding Fathers grounded their own project of civic renewal in rights and freedom. But if every citizen is guaranteed life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness, does this mean America is a nation where the individual reigns supreme?
America’s young democracy soon found its prophet in Ralph Waldo Emerson, who preached a gospel of self-reliance, small government, and self-improvement. But with the coming of the Civil War, Emerson’s triumphant individual became a cog in a vast war machine. Radical technological transformations convinced the psychologist-turned-philosopher William James that the self was more fragmented and fragile than Emerson believed. He found virtue in pluralism and diversity, seeing selfishness as the cardinal sin. Two world wars and several failed revolutions later, John Rawls, shaken by the divisions of Vietnam, sought to establish a new secular foundation for social cooperation. Over time, we have sought to hold these opposing value systems in delicate balance, promising both liberty and justice for all.
This work has too many virtues to name. . . . In sparkling writing, Liberty or Justice for All? retells the American past in a fresh study through its controlling ideas as embodied in particular settings that Philip F. Gura shows are fascinating in their own right.
* author of Ars Vitae: The Fate of Inwardness and the Return of the Ancient Arts of Living *Gura’s illuminating explanation of the intersection between politics and religion as shifting, conflicting, and sometimes corresponding modes of thought is of particular importance in his analysis. Liberty or Justice for All? is written with both poise and clarity and grounded in quite extensive research in significant texts of the eighteenth, nineteenth, and twentieth centuries.
* author of Natural Life: Thoreau’s Worldly TranscendentaliISBN: 9780820363127
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
208 pages