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Liberty's Nation


Article # : 12462 

Section : BOOK WORLD
Issue Date : 7 / 1987  3,112 Words
Author : Edward S. Shapiro
Edward S. Shapiro is professor of history at Seton Hall University and author of The Letters of Sidney Hook: Democracy, Communism, and the Cold War (1995).

       SPHERES OF LIBERTY
       Changing Perceptions of Liberty in American Culture
       Michael Kammen
       Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1986
       191 pp., $19.50
       
        Of all the meanings of America, none has been more pervasive than America as the land of liberty. The dichotomy that Americans have traditionally drawn between America and Europe has revolved around the contrast between American freedom and European oppression. Jefferson's Declaration of Independence justified the revolution on the basis of "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." The Constitution's preamble spoke of securing "the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity." In December 1810, the patriot poet Joel Barlow wrote, "The object of history is instruction. The history of our country is the history of liberty; its two former periods may teach men how to acquire liberty, the last should teach them how to preserve it." Sen. Daniel Webster agreed. "Our inheritance is an inheritance of American liberty. That liberty is characteristic, peculiar, and altogether our own. Nothing like it existed in former times." In the Gettysburg Address, that most important of all American speeches, Lincoln spoke of "a new nation, conceived in liberty and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal." In 1876, Charles Francis Adams, Jr., the grandson and great-grandson of two presidents, rhetorically asked a Massachusetts audience what had distinguished the American during the first hundred years of independence. He answered, "His devotion to the principle of liberty." Sixty-five years later, Franklin Roosevelt defined America's stake in World War II in terms of "Four Freedoms." ... (2000 of 19594 Characters)
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