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  • Scotland and America in the Age of Paine

    Ideas of liberty and the making of four Americans

    Ronald Lyndsay Crawford

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    Thomas Paine is rightly regarded as among the most influential of English political iconoclasts. His two best-known works – Common Sense (1776) and Rights of Man (1791) – ensured his remarkable success in positioning himself, both literally and literarily, at the forefront of both the American and French revolutions. It is no exaggeration that Paine’s works lie at the heart of popular revolutionary sentiment as it came to express itself in the later eighteenth century. For that reason they were regarded at one level as manifestos of the crying need for social and political change, but at the same time by government and the law as dangerous instruments of sedition and republicanism.

    In this new title from Aberdeen University Press, Dr Ronald Crawford explores how, in both Scotland and America, Paine’s brand of radicalism took particular hold, though only for a limited period – the ‘Age of Paine’.

    Part One of the book explores American themes discoverable in the works of Francis Hutcheson, David Hume, Adam Smith and Adam Ferguson; the explosive political impact within Scotland of Rights of Man (1776); and how Scottish precedents, through the writings of Benjamin Franklin and Thomas Jefferson, helped shape the educational system of the early United States.

    Part Two examines the careers of four Scots emigrants who made distinguished contributions to the American ideal of liberty: the ‘bookman’ Robert Aitken who employed Paine as contributing editor of his Pennsylvania Magazine; John Witherspoon, President of the College of New Jersey, one of the signatories to the Declaration of Independence in 1776; the radical poet, Alexander Wilson, whose (very different) Scottish and American careers are re-examined with the help of newly found original sources; and the lawyer from Fife, James Wilson, another signer, whose remarkable contributions to the evolution of the US Constitution are considered from the point of view of his indebtedness to numerous Scottish sources.

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    History 

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    How to cite this book
    Crawford, R. 2022. Scotland and America in the Age of Paine: Ideas of liberty and the making of four Americans. Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Press. DOI: https://doi.org/10.57132/book20
    Crawford, R.L., 2022. Scotland and America in the Age of Paine: Ideas of liberty and the making of four Americans. Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Press. DOI: https://doi.org/10.57132/book20
    Crawford, R L. Scotland and America in the Age of Paine: Ideas of Liberty and the Making of Four Americans. Aberdeen University Press, 2022. DOI: https://doi.org/10.57132/book20
    Crawford, R. L. (2022). Scotland and America in the Age of Paine: Ideas of liberty and the making of four Americans. Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Press. DOI: https://doi.org/10.57132/book20
    Crawford, Ronald Lyndsay. 2022. Scotland and America in the Age of Paine: Ideas of Liberty and the Making of Four Americans. Aberdeen: Aberdeen University Press. DOI: https://doi.org/10.57132/book20




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    This book is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution + Noncommercial 4.0 license. Copyright is retained by the author(s)

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    Additional Information

    Published on May 20, 2022

    Language

    English

    Pages:

    584

    ISBN
    Paperback 978-1-85752-090-3

    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.57132/book20



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