James Kirke Paulding: The Last Republican
By (Author) Lorman Ratner
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
17th September 1992
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Biography: historical, political and military
Political ideologies and movements
818.3
Hardback
168
For many decades after the American Revolution, the image of the republic shaped people's thinking and influenced events. Yet the simple republic and a growing, increasingly complex capitalist America represented a clear paradox in American thinking. James Kirke Paulding was at one pole of that paradox. The first American writer to devote his career to describing America and Americans, and to social commentary and social criticism, Paulding's cause was the defence of the republic as a way of life, an economic and social system and an ethical code. Although this book is Paulding's story, it is even more an attempt to describe America as Paulding saw it. Chapter one focuses on Paulding's part in urging the ongoing reasons for liberation from England and the protection of a unique American society. In chapter two, the discussion shifts to Paulding's view of the simple republic, and chapter three considers the role of the West in preserving the simple republic. Although Paulding considered the West to be America's future, the South became for him its present. Chapter four considers his focus on the South in his struggle to save the heritage of the Revolution. Yet society was changing, and chapter five focuses on Paulding's role in politics and his relationship with politicians in his last efforts to have both a noble past and a rapidly changing present. As the Civil War approached, the country, in Paulding's eyes, fell into the hands of fanatics who would sacrifice its heritage for the sake of a cause. His efforts to resist that "fanaticism" are the subject of the final chapter.
LORMAN RATNER is Professor Emeritus of History at the University of Tennessee and Adjunct Professor of History at the University of Illinois, Urbana.