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Thomas Jefferson, legal history, and the art of recollection, Matthew Crow, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, New York

Label
Thomas Jefferson, legal history, and the art of recollection, Matthew Crow, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, New York
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Thomas Jefferson, legal history, and the art of recollection
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Responsibility statement
Matthew Crow, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, New York
Series statement
Cambridge historical studies in American law and society
Summary
In this innovative book, historian Matthew Crow unpacks the legal and political thought of Thomas Jefferson as a tool for thinking about constitutional transformation, settler colonialism, and race and civic identity in the era of the American Revolution. Thomas Jefferson's practices of reading, writing, and collecting legal history grew out of broader histories of early modern empire and political thought. As a result of the peculiar ways in which he theorized and experienced the imperial crisis and revolutionary constitutionalism, Jefferson came to understand a republican constitution as requiring a textual, material culture of law shared by citizens with the cultivated capacity to participate in such a culture. At the center of the story in Thomas Jefferson, Legal History, and the Art of Recollection, Crow concludes, we find legal history as a mode of organizing and governing collective memory, and as a way of instituting a particular form of legal subjectivity
Classification
Content

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