The Second Creation
Fixing the American Constitution in the Founding Era
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Narrated by:
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Kristoffer Tabori
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By:
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Jonathan Gienapp
About this listen
A stunning revision of our founding document’s evolving history that forces us to confront anew the question that animated the founders so long ago: What is our Constitution?
Americans widely believe that the United States Constitution was created when it was drafted in 1787 and ratified in 1788. But in a shrewd rereading of the founding era, Jonathan Gienapp upends this long-held assumption, recovering the unknown story of American constitutional creation in the decade after its adoption - a story with explosive implications for current debates over constitutional originalism and interpretation.
When the Constitution first appeared, it was shrouded in uncertainty. Not only was its meaning unclear, but so too was its essential nature. Was the American Constitution a written text, or something else? - Was it a legal text? Was it finished or unfinished? What rules would guide its interpretation? Who would adjudicate competing readings? As political leaders put the Constitution to work, none of these questions had answers. Through vigorous debates they confronted the document’s uncertainty, and - over time - how these leaders imagined the Constitution radically changed. They had begun trying to fix, or resolve, an imperfect document, but they ended up fixing, or cementing, a very particular notion of the Constitution as a distinctively textual and historical artifact circumscribed in space and time. This means that some of the Constitution’s most definitive characteristics, ones which are often treated as innate, were only added later and were thus contingent and optional.
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The Constitution of the United States begins with the words "we the people". But from the earliest days of the American republic, there have been two competing notions of "the people", which led to two very different visions of the Constitution. Those who view "we the people" collectively think popular sovereignty resides in the people as a group, which leads them to favor a democratic constitution that allows the will of the people to be expressed by majority rule
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Read the book, don't listen
- By I Keep AMZN in Business on 06-23-16
By: Randy E. Barnett
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The Constitution
- An Introduction
- By: Michael Stokes Paulsen, Luke Paulsen
- Narrated by: Walter Dixon
- Length: 14 hrs and 31 mins
- Unabridged
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From war powers to health care, freedom of speech to gun ownership, religious liberty to abortion, practically every aspect of American life is shaped by the Constitution. This vital document, along with its history of political and judicial interpretation, governs our individual lives and the life of our nation. Yet most of us know surprisingly little about the Constitution itself, and are woefully unprepared to think for ourselves about recent developments in its long and storied history.
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The Constitution-A must reading for All Americans
- By Anonymous User on 06-12-15
By: Michael Stokes Paulsen, and others
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Our Declaration
- A Reading of the Declaration of Independence in Defense of Equality
- By: Danielle Allen
- Narrated by: Robin Miles
- Length: 9 hrs and 11 mins
- Unabridged
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In just 1,337 words, the Declaration of Independence changed the world, but curiously it is now rarely read from start to finish, much less understood. Unsettled by this, Danielle Allen read the text quietly with students and discovered its animating power. "Bringing the analytical skills of a philosopher, the voice of a gifted memoirist, and the spirit of a soulful humanist to the task, Allen manages to find new meaning in Thomas Jefferson' s understanding of equality," says Joseph J. Ellis about Our Declaration.
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Second Most Interesting Book I've Ever Read
- By Anonymous User on 01-27-15
By: Danielle Allen
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James Madison and the Making of America
- By: Kevin R. C. Gutzman
- Narrated by: Arthur Morey
- Length: 15 hrs and 52 mins
- Unabridged
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In James Madison and the Making of America, historian Kevin Gutzman looks beyond the way James Madison is traditionally seen - as "The Father of the Constitution” - to find a more complex and sometimes contradictory portrait of this influential Founding Father and the ways in which he influenced the spirit of today's United States.
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Not a traditional biography
- By David on 12-14-12
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The Quartet
- Orchestrating the Second American Revolution, 1783-1789
- By: Joseph J. Ellis
- Narrated by: Robertson Dean
- Length: 8 hrs and 25 mins
- Unabridged
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From Pulitzer Prize-winning American historian Joseph J. Ellis, the unexpected story of why the thirteen colonies, having just fought off the imposition of a distant centralized governing power, would decide to subordinate themselves anew.
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bias is not good history
- By Craig on 01-24-18
By: Joseph J. Ellis
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James Madison
- America's First Politician
- By: Jay Cost
- Narrated by: Dan Woren
- Length: 14 hrs and 43 mins
- Unabridged
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How do you solve a problem like James Madison? The fourth president is one of the most confounding figures in early American history; his political trajectory seems almost intentionally inconsistent. He was both for and against a strong federal government. He wrote about the dangers of political parties in the Federalist Papers and then helped to found the Republican Party just a few years later. This so-called Madison problem has occupied scholars for ages.
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Good listen
- By Anonymous User on 06-27-22
By: Jay Cost
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On Liberty
- By: John Stuart Mill
- Narrated by: Gildart Jackson
- Length: 4 hrs and 58 mins
- Unabridged
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First published in 1859, John Stuart Mill's On Liberty is an exhaustive exploration of social and civic liberty, its limits, and its consequences. Mill's work is a classic of political liberalism that contains a rational justification of the freedom of the individual in opposition to the claims of the state.
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should be read by liberals and conservatives
- By Jim Hennessy on 09-13-18
By: John Stuart Mill
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Hitler's American Model
- The United States and the Making of Nazi Race Law
- By: James Q. Whitman
- Narrated by: James Anderson Foster
- Length: 5 hrs and 36 mins
- Unabridged
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Nazism triumphed in Germany during the high era of Jim Crow laws in the United States. Did the American regime of racial oppression in any way inspire the Nazis? The unsettling answer is yes. James Whitman presents a detailed investigation of the American impact on the notorious Nuremberg Laws, the centerpiece anti-Jewish legislation of the Nazi regime.
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Did not we suspect this?
- By Anonymous User on 11-04-18
By: James Q. Whitman
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A Lot of People Are Saying
- The New Conspiracism and the Assault on Democracy
- By: Nancy L. Rosenblum, Russell Muirhead
- Narrated by: Katherine Fenton
- Length: 6 hrs and 49 mins
- Unabridged
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Conspiracy theories are as old as politics. But conspiracists today have introduced something new - conspiracy without theory. And the new conspiracism has moved from the fringes to the heart of government with the election of Donald Trump. In A Lot of People Are Saying, Russell Muirhead and Nancy Rosenblum reveal how the new conspiracism differs from classic conspiracy theory, why so few officials speak truth to conspiracy, and what needs to be done to resist it.
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INSIGHTFUL
- By JaredENH on 04-30-19
By: Nancy L. Rosenblum, and others
What listeners say about The Second Creation
Average customer ratingsReviews - Please select the tabs below to change the source of reviews.
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- Anonymous User
- 08-30-23
A Fascinating History
History is at its most powerful when it unearths the construction of deeply significant norms and practices that makes you question your assumptions about how society functions. This book is a poster child for that in that it makes you think about the way we view and talk about the US constitution. It also exposes the myths surrounding popular notions of the sanctity of “the framer’s intentions”. Can not recommend this strongly enough. Majestically written, engaging, thorough and paradigm shifting.
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- Christopher
- 11-23-22
An important corrective
Gienapp’s The Second Creation offers a thorough, and perhaps exhaustive, account of constitutional creation and interpretation in the early American republic. It serves as an important corrective to both existing historical scholarship and (perhaps more importantly) judges attempting to hide their partisan activism under the guise of “originalism.”
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- Anonymous User
- 06-05-24
Great book, frustrating narration
The substance of this book is terrific; a well-researched, very insightful account of how people thought about the nature of the Constitution, and constitutions generally, in the Founding era, with important (arguably fatal) implications for originalist interpretation theories. But I completely agree with other reviewers about the narration: the narrator's constant announcement of "quote/unquote"--often several times in one sentence, dozens of times in a minute--is distracting to the point of being unbearable. And it's wholly unnecessary in an audio narration, where quoted material can be conveyed by voice intonation instead announcing every quotation mark.
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- Richard
- 08-08-20
Ratifying Convention Breathed Life into Constitution
James Madison said that. It is a living constitution because We The People breathed life into it! Those first ten years of congress of which Madison was involved created the originalist and living constitution concept. And Madison played every side of it. Fascinating and ground breaking research and weaving the the research into understandable form from my limited perspective.
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- Anonymous User
- 07-26-23
Quote, Unquote
Terrific book. The issue is with the reading of it. It’s an academic book that constantly quotes other sources, and the reader begins and ends each quotation by saying “quote/unquote.” This happens sometimes multiple times per sentence and quickly becomes grating. It adds little to no value for a listener but is very distracting.
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1 person found this helpful
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- David Paquette
- 11-02-22
Infuriating Narration
I was very much looking forward to hearing this book. The underlying content (so far) is impressive, as I expected, BUT I will not listen to the rest. The performance is maddening in one very specific way. As I had heard, Mr. Gienapp took extraordinary pains to reference and accurately cite his sources, often using multiple fragments of Founders' writings in a single paragraph, or even in a single sentence. He carefully put any direct quotations between quotation marks. This is admirable. However, instead of setting such quotations off by using inflection, as many narrators do, this performer, Mr. Tabori, insists on saying, "quote" at the beginning and "unquote" at the end of every such citation. The result is a narration that is SO choppy that the meanings of the sentences becomes fragmented and difficult to follow. I am only partway through Chapter 1, and I have heard the words "quote" and "unquote" more than one hundred times already. It has become like listening to nails on a chalkboard. This approach to quotations is not a reading style. It is a tic.
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2 people found this helpful