Item #028881 The Contest in America. John Stuart Mill.

The Contest in America

Boston: Little, Brown and Co., 1862. Small Octavo. Item #028881

32 pages. Scholars have generally traced J. S. Mill's interest in the United States to the commercial and democratic aspects of American society. Yet Mill also suggested a third respect in which America was unique: it was the only existing nation founded on the basis of "abstract principles." This insight provides the key to a fuller understanding of Mill's various writings on America. In his early essays, Mill worried that America's founding principles and institutions were beginning to take on the characteristics of dogma: they were universally accepted, but no longer discussed. Mill responded optimistically to the Civil War because he believed the struggle to extinguish slavery would ultimately restore the meaning or vitality of the founding principles of liberty and equality. With the nation thus "regenerated," Mill predicted that Americans would soon recognize and address other illiberal aspects of American society, including the subordinate status of women. bound in printed wraps, covers toned, front wrapper with one corner frazzled, closed tear above mill's name, spine with chipping and a split. A very good copy of this early pamphlet.

Price: $65.00

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