Alexis de Tocqueville’s Democracy in America is the most important book ever written about the nation. Published in two volumes in 1835 and 1840, respectively, Tocqueville’s masterpiece reflects on the origins, development, character, and possible futures of a nation that the author believed had moved to the center of world history. But for all its immense ambition, and the incredible breadth of its vision, Democracy in America is also wonderfully detailed and complex. It is marked by tensions and concerns that have never been resolved.

In this five-session course, we will read Democracy in America as it was meant to be read: carefully, appreciatively, skeptically, and reflectively. This course concerns the present and the future as much as this classic early examination of American democracy.

Image: Carte Dressée Pour L’Ouvrage Intitulé de la Democratie en Amérique Par A. de Tocqueville 1834.

 

This seminar is open to Hertog alumni of all class years and programs. Up to 15 fellows will be selected. Admissions are made on a rolling basis.

Apply by May 12 using the link in the Hertog Newsletter.

Questions? Can’t find the link? Email nate@hertogfoundation.org.

 

 

John Harpham discusses "The Intellectual Origins of American Slavery"

Faculty

John Harpham

John Harpham is a Lecturer on Social Studies at Harvard University. He is an historian of political thought and an intellectual historian. His research examines ideas about slavery, freedom, and race, as well as the relation of such ideas to practices of enslavement and resistance across the Atlantic world. He is at work on a three-volume series about the ideas that were associated with the origins, development, and eventual abolition of slavery in the Anglo-American Atlantic world. The first volume, The Intellectual Origins of American Slavery, is currently available from Harvard University Press.

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