Winner of the Book Prize for New Authors from the National Historical
Society
The War of 1812 played a critical role in the emergence of an American
"culture of capitalism." In The Republic Reborn Steven Watts offers a
brilliant new interpretation of the war and the foundation of liberal
America. He explores the sweeping changes that took place in America
between 1790 and 1820--the growth of an entrepreneurial economy of
competition, the devlopment of a liberal political structure and
ideology, and the rise of a bourgeois culture of self-interest and
self-control. "Serving as a vehicle for change and offering an outlet
for the anxieties of a changing socity," Watts writes, the War of 1812
"ultimately intensified and sanctioned the imperatives of a developing
world-view."