Paine and Jefferson in the Age of Revolutions

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Simon P. Newman, Peter S. Onuf
University of Virginia Press, Nov 11, 2013 - History - 320 pages
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The enormous popularity of his pamphlet Common Sense made Thomas Paine one of the best-known patriots during the early years of American independence. His subsequent service with the Continental Army, his publication of The American Crisis (1776–83), and his work with Pennsylvania’s revolutionary government consolidated his reputation as one of the foremost radicals of the Revolution. Thereafter, Paine spent almost fifteen years in Europe, where he was actively involved in the French Revolution, articulating his radical social, economic, and political vision in major publications such as The Rights of Man (1791), The Age of Reason (1793-1807), and Agrarian Justice (1797). Such radicalism was deemed a danger to the state in his native Britain, where Paine was found guilty of sedition, and even in the United States some of Paine’s later publications lost him a great deal of his early popularity.


Yet despite this legacy, historians have paid less attention to Paine than to other leading Patriots such as Thomas Jefferson. In Paine and Jefferson in the Age of Revolutions, editors Simon Newman and Peter Onuf present a collection of essays that examine how the reputations of two figures whose outlooks were so similar have had such different trajectories.

 

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Contents

Introduction
The Radicalism of Thomas Jefferson and Thomas Paine Considered
The Early Constitutionalism
Thomas Paines Early Radicalism 17681783
Paine Jefferson and Revolutionary Radicalism in Early National America
Thomas Paine andBenjamin Franklins FrenchCircle Philipp Ziesche
The Troubled Reception of Thomas Paine in France Germany the Netherlands
PAINE
Paine Jefferson and the Nookta Crisis
Thomas Jeffersons Portrait of Thomas Paine
Jefferson Paine and the Radicalization
Thomas Paine in the Atlantic Historical Imagination
Notes on Contributors
Copyright

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About the author (2013)

Simon P. Newman is the Sir Denis Brogan Professor of American History at the University of Glasgow. Peter S. Onuf is a Senior Research Fellow at the Thomas Jefferson Foundation and the Thomas Jefferson Foundation Professor Emeritus at the University of Virginia.

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