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The Future of Reconstruction Studies

The Future of Reconstruction Studies foru m The Civil War and State-Building: A Reconsideration Gary Gerstle http://journalofthecivilwarera.org/ forum-the-future-of-reconstruction-studies A favored way of interpreting American political development is to stress the revolutionary effects of the Civil War on the American nation and its state. In this view, the defeat of the Confederacy interred state’s rights and concentrated power in the central government to an unprec edented degree. This central state, this “Yankee Leviathan,” in the words of Richard Bensel, firs t focused on creating a legal and political environ- ment in which capitalism could flourish. In the hands of the Populists and Progressives, this same central state then developed the political resolve and administrative capacity to remedy the multiple ills that an unbounded capitalism had generated. By the time of the New Deal, big government, conceived in the tradition of European social democracy, had tamed big capitalism. What this account leaves out is how deep remained the commitment in the North across the Civil War years to keep intact the government that the Constitution had ordained. Many of the new powers assumed by the fed- eral government during that time were justified by war emergency and thus understood to be legitimate only so long as wartime lasted. Even the major effort during the Radical Republican era to move beyond circumstances of emergency and change the conception of governance permanently via constitutional amendment altered the balance of power between the states and the central government less than is commonly thought. The Civil War was therefore less of a pivot in the history of the American state than is commonly thought. This essay develops that argument and suggests an alternative way of thinking about nineteenth-century state-building. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png The Journal of the Civil War Era University of North Carolina Press

The Future of Reconstruction Studies

The Journal of the Civil War Era , Volume 7 (1) – Jan 26, 2017

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Publisher
University of North Carolina Press
Copyright
Copyright @ The University of North Carolina Press
ISSN
2159-9807

Abstract

foru m The Civil War and State-Building: A Reconsideration Gary Gerstle http://journalofthecivilwarera.org/ forum-the-future-of-reconstruction-studies A favored way of interpreting American political development is to stress the revolutionary effects of the Civil War on the American nation and its state. In this view, the defeat of the Confederacy interred state’s rights and concentrated power in the central government to an unprec edented degree. This central state, this “Yankee Leviathan,” in the words of Richard Bensel, firs t focused on creating a legal and political environ- ment in which capitalism could flourish. In the hands of the Populists and Progressives, this same central state then developed the political resolve and administrative capacity to remedy the multiple ills that an unbounded capitalism had generated. By the time of the New Deal, big government, conceived in the tradition of European social democracy, had tamed big capitalism. What this account leaves out is how deep remained the commitment in the North across the Civil War years to keep intact the government that the Constitution had ordained. Many of the new powers assumed by the fed- eral government during that time were justified by war emergency and thus understood to be legitimate only so long as wartime lasted. Even the major effort during the Radical Republican era to move beyond circumstances of emergency and change the conception of governance permanently via constitutional amendment altered the balance of power between the states and the central government less than is commonly thought. The Civil War was therefore less of a pivot in the history of the American state than is commonly thought. This essay develops that argument and suggests an alternative way of thinking about nineteenth-century state-building.

Journal

The Journal of the Civil War EraUniversity of North Carolina Press

Published: Jan 26, 2017

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