Marcus Cunliffe, whom the Washington Post and Times Herald calls a
master historian capable of seeing his subject whole, has written a
cogent and revealing study of America's first half-century under the
federal Constitution. Bounded by the first Washington Administration and
the last Jackson Administration, this is the period in which democracy
grew and shaped the nation. It witnessed the launching of the federal
government; the expansion of the frontier; the establishment of a party
system; the enunciation of a foreign policy; the manufacture of the
symbols of nationalism; and the forging of the arguments of
sectionalism. Most important, Mr. Cunliffe writes, the American
character seems to have been formed in essence within a generation of
George Washington's accession to the Presidency.
An urbane, stimulating, and admirably proportioned analysis. . .
.--Alexander DeConde, Wisconsin Magazine of History
What [Mr. Cunliffe] has done is to weave together and show the fertile
interplay of the American dream and the American reality--and show how
much the dream modified the reality. . . . an acute and elegant
performance.--Times Literary Supplement