In 1776, the Declaration of Independence announced a new political order founded on equality, natural rights, consent, and self-government. It began a spirited conversation about liberty and equality, commerce and virtue, union and slavery, memory and hope; it did not settle the meaning of America.

Marking the 250th anniversary of the United States, this seminar brings together five distinguished teachers for five concentrated encounters with texts that have shaped, challenged, and deepened the American experiment. Fellows will study The Declaration of Independence with Yuval Levin, Adam Smith’s The Wealth of Nations with Ryan Hanley, George Washington’s Farewell Address with Darren Staloff, Nathaniel Hawthorne’s Earth’s Holocaust with Christopher Scalia, and Lincoln’s Gettysburg Address with Diana Schaub.

Taken together, these sessions ask what America has claimed for itself and what kind of people a free republic requires. The course treats the anniversary as an occasion for reflection and judgment.

Image: The Declaration: Mural by Barry Faulkner 

Faculty

Yuval Levin

Yuval Levin is a Resident Scholar and Director of Social, Cultural, and Constitutional Studies at the American Enterprise Institute and the Editor of National Affairs magazine. Mr. Levin served on the White House domestic policy staff under President George W. Bush.

Ryan P. Hanley

Ryan Patrick Hanley is Professor of Political Science at Boston College. His research in the history of political philosophy focuses on the Enlightenment. He is the author of Our Great Purpose: Adam Smith on Living a Better Life and Love’s Enlightenment: Rethinking Charity in Modernity.

Christopher Scalia

Christopher J. Scalia is a senior fellow in the Social, Cultural, and Constitutional Studies department at the American Enterprise Institute, where he focuses on literature, culture, and higher education. Prior to his role at AEI, Dr. Scalia was an English professor with a specialty in 18th-century and early 19th-century British literature.

Diana Schaub

Diana Schaub is a nonresident senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute (AEI), where her work is focused on American political thought and history, particularly Abraham Lincoln, Frederick Douglass, African American political thought, Montesquieu, and the relevance of core American ideals to contemporary challenges and debates. Concurrently, she is Professor Emerita of Political Science at Loyola University Maryland, where she taught for almost three decades.

Darren Staloff

Darren Staloff is a retired Professor of History from the City College of New York and the Graduate Center of CUNY. Professor Staloff has published numerous papers and reviews on the subject of early American history.

Preview the Syllabus by Week/Session

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