George Mason: Architect of the Bill Rights
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Beschrijving
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George Mason helped shape American liberty, then refused to sign the Constitution because he believed it did not protect liberty enough.In 1776, Mason drafted the Virginia Declaration of Rights, one of the most influential rights documents of the revolutionary era. Its language of inherent rights, popular sovereignty and restrained government helped shape the American rights tradition and later echoed in the federal Bill of Rights.Yet Mason was also one of the founding generation's most difficult figures. He was a private Virginia planter drawn reluctantly into public life, a critic of concentrated power, a critic of the slave trade, and a slaveholder whose own life contradicted the fullest meaning of the rights he declared.At the Philadelphia Convention of 1787, Mason helped debate the structure of the new federal government. But when the Constitution emerged without a bill of rights, and with compromises over slavery he found dangerous and morally troubling, he refused to sign. His dissent did not stop ratification, but it helped make amendments politically unavoidable.George Mason: Architect of the Bill of Rights tells the story of a founder who shaped the language of American freedom from outside the circle of constitutional victory. It follows his world at Gunston Hall, his role in Virginia's revolutionary politics, his demand for written rights, his uneasy relationship with slavery, and his final refusal at Philadelphia.This is a portrait of a burdened founder: principled, severe, reluctant, brilliant and deeply compromised. Mason's life reminds us that liberty was not only signed into being. It was also demanded by those who refused to sign.
George Mason helped shape American liberty, then refused to sign the Constitution because he believed it did not protect liberty enough.In 1776, Mason drafted the Virginia Declaration of Rights, one of the most influential rights documents of the revolutionary era. Its language of inherent rights, popular sovereignty and restrained government helped shape the American rights tradition and later echoed in the federal Bill of Rights.Yet Mason was also one of the founding generation's most difficult figures. He was a private Virginia planter drawn reluctantly into public life, a critic of concentrated power, a critic of the slave trade, and a slaveholder whose own life contradicted the fullest meaning of the rights he declared.At the Philadelphia Convention of 1787, Mason helped debate the structure of the new federal government. But when the Constitution emerged without a bill of rights, and with compromises over slavery he found dangerous and morally troubling, he refused to sign. His dissent did not stop ratification, but it helped make amendments politically unavoidable.George Mason: Architect of the Bill of Rights tells the story of a founder who shaped the language of American freedom from outside the circle of constitutional victory. It follows his world at Gunston Hall, his role in Virginia's revolutionary politics, his demand for written rights, his uneasy relationship with slavery, and his final refusal at Philadelphia.This is a portrait of a burdened founder: principled, severe, reluctant, brilliant and deeply compromised. Mason's life reminds us that liberty was not only signed into being. It was also demanded by those who refused to sign.
AmazonPagina's: 270, Paperback, Independently published
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