Democracy in America
No other book is as pervasively woven into the fabric of American public life and culture as Democracy in America. Tocqueville's study of nineteenth-century America is cited often and everywhere: from presidential addresses to high-school speeches, from the editorial pages of national newspapers to local radio broadcasts, from high-school and college classrooms to Sunday sermons. This Norton Critical Edition is based on the 1835 and 1840 English translations of Tocqueville's two volumes by his friend Henry Reeve. It allows today's readers to experience the book as Tocqueville's contemporaries did. It is accompanied by a full-scale introduction addressing Democracy in America's canonical place in American life and by essential explanatory annotations.

"Backgrounds" includes related letters from Tocqueville to Ernest de Chabrol, Henry Reeve, and John Quincy Adams, among others, in which he shares impressions of his nine-and-a-half-month journey through the United States. A collection of nine European and American reviews-including those by Sainte-Beuve. Pellegrino Rossi, John C. Spencer, and John Stuart Mill-allows readers to assess Democracy in America's contemporary reception. Recent interpretations by David Riesman, Max Lerner, Robert Nisbet, James T. Schleifer, Catherine Zuckert, Sheldon S. Wolin, Edward C. Banfield, Daniel T. Rodgers, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., Sean Wilentz, Henry Steele Commager, James T. Kloppenberg, and Tamara M. Teale explore Tocqueville's influence on American political thought and on democracy's legacy. A Selected Bibliography is also included.

1100011171
Democracy in America
No other book is as pervasively woven into the fabric of American public life and culture as Democracy in America. Tocqueville's study of nineteenth-century America is cited often and everywhere: from presidential addresses to high-school speeches, from the editorial pages of national newspapers to local radio broadcasts, from high-school and college classrooms to Sunday sermons. This Norton Critical Edition is based on the 1835 and 1840 English translations of Tocqueville's two volumes by his friend Henry Reeve. It allows today's readers to experience the book as Tocqueville's contemporaries did. It is accompanied by a full-scale introduction addressing Democracy in America's canonical place in American life and by essential explanatory annotations.

"Backgrounds" includes related letters from Tocqueville to Ernest de Chabrol, Henry Reeve, and John Quincy Adams, among others, in which he shares impressions of his nine-and-a-half-month journey through the United States. A collection of nine European and American reviews-including those by Sainte-Beuve. Pellegrino Rossi, John C. Spencer, and John Stuart Mill-allows readers to assess Democracy in America's contemporary reception. Recent interpretations by David Riesman, Max Lerner, Robert Nisbet, James T. Schleifer, Catherine Zuckert, Sheldon S. Wolin, Edward C. Banfield, Daniel T. Rodgers, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., Sean Wilentz, Henry Steele Commager, James T. Kloppenberg, and Tamara M. Teale explore Tocqueville's influence on American political thought and on democracy's legacy. A Selected Bibliography is also included.

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Overview

No other book is as pervasively woven into the fabric of American public life and culture as Democracy in America. Tocqueville's study of nineteenth-century America is cited often and everywhere: from presidential addresses to high-school speeches, from the editorial pages of national newspapers to local radio broadcasts, from high-school and college classrooms to Sunday sermons. This Norton Critical Edition is based on the 1835 and 1840 English translations of Tocqueville's two volumes by his friend Henry Reeve. It allows today's readers to experience the book as Tocqueville's contemporaries did. It is accompanied by a full-scale introduction addressing Democracy in America's canonical place in American life and by essential explanatory annotations.

"Backgrounds" includes related letters from Tocqueville to Ernest de Chabrol, Henry Reeve, and John Quincy Adams, among others, in which he shares impressions of his nine-and-a-half-month journey through the United States. A collection of nine European and American reviews-including those by Sainte-Beuve. Pellegrino Rossi, John C. Spencer, and John Stuart Mill-allows readers to assess Democracy in America's contemporary reception. Recent interpretations by David Riesman, Max Lerner, Robert Nisbet, James T. Schleifer, Catherine Zuckert, Sheldon S. Wolin, Edward C. Banfield, Daniel T. Rodgers, Arthur Schlesinger Jr., Sean Wilentz, Henry Steele Commager, James T. Kloppenberg, and Tamara M. Teale explore Tocqueville's influence on American political thought and on democracy's legacy. A Selected Bibliography is also included.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780486820644
Publisher: Dover Publications
Publication date: 03/01/2017
Series: Dover Thrift Editions
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 1104
File size: 18 MB
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About the Author

Alexis de Tocqueville was born in 1805 to a noble French family that had survived the French Revolution. His father gained some political power under the reign of the Bourbons, and after the July Revolution of 1830, the family was exiled along with the king. Tocqueville, then twenty-five years old, stayed in France, swearing allegiance to the new government. Shortly thereafter he and a friend, Gustave de Beaumont, sought and received a government assignment to study the prison system of the United States. They arrived in America in 1831. After extensive travels across the young nation, Tocqueville wrote Democracy in America (published in two volumes in 1835 and 1840). The publication of the first volume made Tocqueville a well-known figure, but he led a quiet life, accepting modest governmental posts, traveling around Europe, and marrying an Englishwoman. In 1848, Tocqueville once again rose to political prominence after a prescient speech that foretold of revolution. After serving through the massive upheavals and overthrows of government, Tocqueville retired from political life in 1849. Always weak in health, his lung disease grew progressively worse from that period on. Moving south several times on doctor’s recommendations, Tocqueville succumbed to death in Cannes in 1859.

Richard D. Heffner received his A.B. and M.A. from Columbia University and has taught history and political science at the University of California, Sarah Lawrence College, and the New School for Social Research. He has been University Professor of Communications and Public Policy at Rutgers since 1964. Mr. Heffner also produces and moderates his prize-winning weekly public television series, The Open Mind, and for twenty years was Chairman of the motion picture industry’s film rating system. In addition to Democracy in America, Mr. Heffner is the editor of the Mentor book A Documentary History of the United States.

Vartan Gregorian is the twelfth president of Carnegie Corporation of New York.  Prior to his current position, Gregorian served for nine years (1989-1997) as president of Brown University and for eight years (1981-1989) as President of the New York Public Library.  He became founding dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at the University of Pennsylvania in 1974 and four years later became its twenty-third provost.  Gregorian, an historian, was a professor at San Francisco State University, UCLA, University of Texas at Austin, Penn, and Brown.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter One

Physical Configuration
of North America


North America divided into two vast regions, one sloping toward the pole, the other toward the equator. Mississippi valley and its geology. The Atlantic coast and the foundation of the English colonies. Contrast between North and South America at the time of discovery. North American forests and prairies. Nomadic native tribes and their appearance, mores, and languages. Traces of an unknown people.

North America has striking geographical features which can be appreciated at first glance.

Land and water, mountains and valleys, seem to have been separated with systematic method, and the simple majesty of this design stands out amid the confusion and immense variety of the scene.

The continent is divided into two vast and almost equal regions.

One region is bounded by the North Pole and the great oceans to east and west, while to the south it stretches down in an irregular triangle to the Great Lakes of Canada.

The second starts where the other ends and covers the rest of the continent.

One region slopes gently toward the pole, the other toward the equator.

The lands to the north of the first region slope so imperceptibly that they may almost be described as plains, and there are no high mountains or deep valleys in the whole of this vast level expanse.

Chance seems to trace the serpentine courses of the streams; great rivers mingle, separate, and meet again; they get lost in a thousand marshes, meandering continually through the watery labyrinth they have formed, and only after innumerable detours do they finally reach the Arctic sea.The Great Lakes, which bring this region to an end, are not framed, as are most lakes in the Old World, by hills or rocks; their banks are level, hardly rising more than a few feet above the water. So each is like a huge cup filled to the brim. The slightest change of global structure would tilt their waters to the pole or to the tropics.

The second region is broken up more and is better suited as a permanent home for man. Two mountain chains run right across it; the Alleghenies parallel to the Atlantic, and the Rockies to the Pacific.

The area between these two mountain chains is 1,341,649 square miles, or about six times that of France.

But the whole of this vast territory is a single valley sloping down from the smooth summits of the Alleghenies and stretching up to the peaks of the Rocky Mountains, with no obstacles in the way.

An immense river flows along the bottom of this valley, and all the waters falling on the mountains on every side drain into it.

Formerly the French called it the St. Louis River, in memory of their distant fatherland, and the Indians in their grandiloquent tongue named it the Father of Waters, the Mississippi.

The Mississippi rises in the borderland between our two regions, not far from the highest point in the plain which links them.

Another river which rises nearby flows down into the polar seas. The Mississippi itself sometimes seems in doubt which way to go; it twists backward several times, and only after slowing down in lakes and marshes seems finally to make up its mind and meander on toward the south.

Sometimes gently flowing along the clay bed which nature has carved out for it, and sometimes swollen by storms; the Mississippi waters some twenty-five hundred square miles.

Thirteen hundred and sixty-four miles above its mouth, the river already has a mean depth of fifteen feet, and ships of three hundred tons can go over four hundred and fifty miles up it.

Fifty-seven large navigable rivers flow into it. Among the tributaries of the Mississippi are one river thirteen hundred leagues long, another of nine hundred leagues," another of six hundred, another of five hundred; there are four other rivers of two hundred leagues, not to mention the innumerable small stream on every side which augment its flood.

The valley watered by the Mississippi seems created for it alone; it dispenses good and evil at will like a local god. Near the river nature displays an inexhaustible fertility; the further you go from its banks, the sparser the vegetation and the poorer becomes the soil, and everything wilts or dies. Nowhere have the great convulsions of the world left more evident traces than in the valley of the Mississippi. The aspect of the whole countryside bears witness to the waters' work. Its sterility as well as its abundance is their work. Deep layers of fertile soil accumulated under the primeval ocean and had time to level out. On the right bank of the river there are huge plains as level as a rolled lawn. But nearer the mountains the land becomes more and more uneven and sterile; the soil is punctured in a thousand places by primitive rocks sticking out here and there like the bones of a skeleton when sinews and flesh have perished. The surface of the earth is covered with granitic sand and irregularly shaped stones, through which a few plants just manage to force their way; it looks like a fertile field covered by the ruins of some vast structure. Analysis of this sand and these rocks easily demonstrates that they are exactly like those on the bare and jagged peaks of the Rocky Mountains. No doubt the rains which washed all the soil down to the bottom of the valley, in the end brought portions of the rocks too; they were rolled down the neighboring slopes, and after they had been dashed one against another, were scattered at the base of the mountains from which they had fallen. (See Appendix I, A.)

All things considered, the valley of the Mississippi is the most magnificent habitation ever prepared by God for man, and yet one may say that it is still only a vast wilderness.

On the eastern slopes of the Alleghenies, between the mountains and the Atlantic, there is a long strip of rock and sand which seems to have been left behind by the retreating ocean. This strip is only forty-eight leagues broad on the average, but three hundred and ninety leagues long. The soil in this part of the American continent can be cultivated only with difficulty. The vegetation is scanty and uniform.

It was on that inhospital shore that the first efforts of human...

Table of Contents

Volume IIntroductionI. Exterior Form of North AmericaII. Origin of the Anglo-Americans, and Importance of this Origin in Relation to Their Future ConditionIII. Social Condition of the Anglo-AmericansIV. The Principle of the Sovereignty of the People in AmericaV. Necessity of Examining the Condition of the States Before That of the Union at LargeVI. Judicial Power in the United States, and its Influence on Political SocietyVII. Political Jurisdiction in the United StatesVIII. The Federal ConstitutionIX. How it Can Be Strictly Said that the People Govern in the United StatesX. Parties in the United StatesXI. Liberty of the Press in the United StatesXII. Political Associations in the United StatesXIII. Government of the Democracy in AmericaXIV. What Are the Real Advantages Which American Society Derives from a Democratic GovernmentXV. Unlimited Power of the Majority in the United States, and Its ConsequencesXVI. Causes Which Mitigate the Tyranny of the Majority in the United StatesXVII. Principal Causes Which Tend to Maintain the Democratic Republic in the United StatesXVIII. The Present and Probable Future Condition of the Three Races Which Inhabit the Territory of the United StatesConclusion Volume IIFirst Book: Influence of Democracy Upon the Action of Intellect in the United States I. Philosophical Method of the AmericansII. Of the Principal Source of Belief Among Democratic NationsIII. Why the Americans Show More Aptitude and Taste for General Ideas than Their Forefathers, the EnglishIV. Why the Americans Have Never Been So Eager as the French for General Ideas in Political AffairsV. How Religion in the United States Avails Itself of Democratic TendenciesVI. The Progress of Roman Catholicism in the United StatesVII. What Causes Democratic Nations to Incline Towards PantheismVIII. How Equality Suggests to the Americans the Idea of the Indefinite Perfectibility of ManIX. The Example of the Americans Does Not Prove That a Democratic People Can Have No Aptitude and No Taste for Science, Literature, and ArtX. Why the Americans are More Addicted to Practical than Theoretical ScienceXI. In What Spirit the Americans Cultivate the ArtsXII. Why the Americans Raise Some Insignificant Monuments, and Others That Are Very GrandXIII. Literary Characteristics of Democratic TimesXIV. The Trade of LiteratureXV. The Study of Greek and Latin Literature is Peculiarly Useful in Democratic CommunitiesXVI. How the American Democracy Has Modified the English LanguageXVII. Of Some Sources of Poetry Amongst Democratic NationsXVIII. Why American Writers and Orators Often Use An Inflated StyleXIX. Some Observations on the Drama Amongst Democratic NationsXX. Some Characteristics of Historians in Democratic TimesXXI. Of Parliamentary Eloquence in the United States Second Book: Influence of Democracy on the Feelings of the Americans I. Why Democratic Nations Show a More Ardent and Enduring Love of Equality than of LibertyII. Of Individualism in Democratic CountriesIII. Individualism Stronger at the Close of a Democratic Revolution than at Other PeriodsIV. That the Americans Combat the Effects of Individualism by Free InstitutionsV. Of the Use Which the Americans Make of Public Associations in Civil LifeVI. Of the Relation Between Public Associations and the NewspapersVII. Relation of Civil to Political AssociationsVIII. How the Americans Combat Individualism by the Principle of Interest Rightly UnderstoodIX. That the Americans Apply the Principle of Interest Rightly Understood to Religious MattersX. Of the Taste for Physical Well-Being in AmericaXI. Peculiar Effects of the Love of Physical Gratifications in Democratic TimesXII. Why Some Americans Manifest a Sort of Fanatical SpiritualismXIII. Why the Americans are So Restless in the Midst of Their ProsperityXIV. How the Taste for Physical Gratifications is United in America to Love of Freedom and Attention to Public AffairsXV. How Religious Belief Sometimes Turns the Thoughts of the Americans to Immaterial PleasuresXVI. How Excessive Care for Worldly Welfare May Impair that WelfareXVII. How, When Conditions Are Equal and Scepticism is Rife, it is Important to Direct Human Actions to Distant ObjectsXVIII. Why Amongst the Americans All Honest Callings are Considered HonorableXIX. What Causes Almost All Americans to Follow Industrial CallingsXX. How An Aristocracy May Be Created by Manufacturers Third Book: Influence of Democracy on Manners Properly So Called I. How Manners are Softened as Social Conditions Become More EqualII. How Democracy Renders the Habitual Intercourse of the Americans Simple and EasyIII. Why the Americans Show So Little Sensitiveness in Their Own Country, and Are So Sensitive in EuropeIV. Consequences of the Three Preceding ChaptersV. How Democracy Affects the Relations of Masters and ServantsVI. How Democratic Institutions and Manners Tend to Raise Rents and Shorten the Terms of LeasesVII. Influence of Democracy on WagesVIII. Influence of Democracy on the FamilyIX. Education of Young Women in the United StatesX. The Young Woman in the Character of a WifeXI. How Equality of Condition Contributes to Maintain Good Morals in AmericaXII. How the Americans Understand the Equality of the SexesXIII. How the Principle of Equality Naturally Divides the Americans Into a Multitude of Small Private CirclesXIV. Some Reflections on American MannersXV. Of the Gravity of the Americans, and Why it Does Not Prevent Them from Often Doing Inconsiderate ThingsXVI. Why the National Vanity of the Americans is More Restless and Captious Than That of the EnglishXVII. How the Aspect of Society in the United States is At Once Excited and MonotonousXVIII. On Honor in the United States and in Democratic CommunitiesXIX. Why So Many Ambitious Men and So Little Lofty Ambitions Are to be Found in the United StatesXX. The Trade of Place-Hunting in Certain Democratic CountriesXXI. Why Great Revolutions Will Become More RareXXII. Why Democratic Nations are Naturally Desirous of Peace, and Democratic Armies of WarXXIII. Which is the Most Warlike and Most Revolutionary Class in Democratic ArmiesXXIV. Causes Which Render Democratic Armies Weaker Than Other armies at the Outset of a Campaign, and More Formidable in Protracted WarfareXXV. Of Discipline in Democratic ArmiesXXVI. Some Considerations on War in Democratic Communities Fourth Book: Influence of Democratic Ideas and Feelings on Political Society I. Equality Naturally Gives Men a Taste for Free InstitutionsII. That the Opinions of Democratic Nations about Government are Naturally Favorable to the Concentration of PowerIII. That the Sentiments of Democratic Nations Accord with Their Opinions in Leading Them to Concentrate Political PowerIV. Of Certain Peculiar and Accidental Causes, which Either Lead a People to Complete the Centralization of Government, or which Divert them From itV. That Amongst the European Nations or Our Time the Sovereign Power is Increasing, Although the Sovereigns are Less StableVI. What Sort of Despotism Democratic Nations Have to FearVII. Continuation of the Preceding ChaptersVIII. General Survey of the Subject AppendixDemocracy in SwitzerlandSpeech of M. De Tocqueville in the Chamber of Deputies, January 27, 1848Biographical Notice of De Tocqueville 
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