Democratizing the Old Dominion
Virginia and the second party system, 1824-1861
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Author
Publication
1996 - University Press of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia
Language
English
Word Count
91,250 words, Guess
Page Count
365 pages
Identifiers
- Open LibraryOL966334M
- ISBN-100813916542
- OCLC Control Number34617804
- OCLC Control Numberdemocratizingold0000shad
- Library of Congress Control Number96002709
and 2 more
- LibraryThing1145933
- Goodreads1108255
Classifications
- DDC320.9755
- LCCF230 .S53 1996
Description
The Emergence of the two-party system in the 1830s led to the democratization of the nation and to decades of heated dispute about democracy. In Democratizing the Old Dominion, the first comprehensive study of antebellum Virginia politics, William G. Shade demonstrates that Virginia typified the nation more closely than did any other state both in the emergence and development of the two-party system and in economic development. Shade places the antebellum debate over slavery and states' rights in the context of early discussion on these subjects by Jefferson and Madison. He shows how the diversity of opinion on these issues was shaped by politics. Discussing the many conflicts within Virginia and the South, he debunks the myth of the unique South and argues that the similarities between North and South were more numerous than the differences. The author also provides a thorough analysis of Virginia's many regional cultures, looking at them comparatively as well as in the context of national party conflicts.
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