An eye-opening account of how Americans came to revere the
Constitution and what this reverence has meant domestically and around
the world. Some Americans today worry that the Federal Constitution is
ill-equipped to respond to mounting democratic threats and may even
exacerbate the worst features of American politics. Yet for as long as
anyone can remember, the Constitution has occupied a quasi-mythical
status in American political culture, which ties ideals of liberty and
equality to assumptions about the inherent goodness of the text’s
design. The Constitutional Bind explores how a flawed document came to
be so glorified and how this has impacted American life. In a
pathbreaking retelling of the American experience, Aziz Rana shows
that today’s reverential constitutional culture is a distinctively
twentieth-century phenomenon. Rana connects this widespread
idolization to another relatively recent development: the rise of US
global dominance. Ultimately, such veneration has had far-reaching
consequences: despite offering a unifying language of reform, it has
also unleashed an interventionist national security state abroad while
undermining the possibility of deeper change at home. Revealing how
the current constitutional order was forged over the twentieth
century, The Constitutional Bind also sheds light on an array of
movement activists—in Black, Indigenous, feminist, labor, and
immigrant politics—who struggled to imagine different constitutional
horizons. As time passed, these voices of opposition were excised from
memory. Today, they offer essential insights.
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How Americans Came to Idolize a Document That Fails Them
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780226350868
Publisert
2024
Utgiver
University of Chicago Press
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter