جزییات کتاب
A Companion to James Madison and James Monroe features essays from leading academics that consider various aspects of the lives and legacies of our fourth and fifth presidents.Provides historians and students of history with a wealth of new insights into the lives and achievements of two of America’s most accomplished statesmen, James Madison and James MonroeFeatures 32 state-of-the field historiographic essays from leading academics that consider various aspects of the lives and legacies of our fourth and fifth presidentsSynthesizes the latest findings, and offers new insights based on original research into primary sourcesAddresses topics that readers often want to learn more about, such as Madison and slaveryContent: Chapter One James Madison's Political Thought: The Ideas of an Acting Politician (pages 4–20): Jack N. RakoveChapter Two James Madison's Journey to an “Honorable and Useful Profession”, 1751–1780 (pages 21–38): Paul Douglas NewmanChapter Three James Madison, 1780–1787: Nationalism and Political Reform (pages 39–55): Adam TateChapter Four James Madison and the Grand Convention: “The Great Difficulty of Representation” (pages 56–73): Gordon Lloyd and Christopher BurkettChapter Five James Madison and the Ratification of the Constitution: A Triumph Over Adversity (pages 74–90): Kevin R. C. GutzmanChapter Six James Madison in the Federalist: Elucidating “The Particular Structure of this Government” (pages 91–108): Michael ZuckertChapter Seven James Madison, Republican Government, and the Formation of the Bill of Rights: “Bound by Every Motive of Prudence” (pages 109–126): Alan GibsonChapter Eight James Madison in the U.S. House of Representatives, 1789–1797: America's First Congressional Floor Leader (pages 127–142): Carey RobertsChapter Nine James Madison and the National Gazette Essays: The Birth of a Party Politician (pages 143–158): Denver BrunsmanChapter Ten James Madison, the Virginia Resolutions, and the Philosophy of Modern American Democracy (pages 159–175): Garrett Ward SheldonChapter Eleven James Madison's Secretary of State Years, 1801–1809: Successes and Failures in Foreign Relations (pages 176–191): Mary HackettChapter Twelve President James Madison's Domestic Policies, 1809–1817: Jeffersonian Factionalism and the Beginnings of American Nationalism (pages 192–206): Aaron N. ColemanChapter Thirteen President James Madison and Foreign Affairs, 1809–1817: Years of Principle and Peril (pages 207–223): David J. SiemersChapter Fourteen James Madison's Retirement, 1817–1836: Engaging the Republican Past, Present, and Future (pages 224–240): James H. ReadChapter Fifteen James Madison and George Washington: The Indispensable Man's Indispensable Man (pages 241–258): Stuart LeibigerChapter Sixteen James Madison and Thomas Jefferson: A “Friendship Which was for Life” (pages 259–273): Jeffry H. MorrisonChapter Seventeen James and Dolley Madison and the Quest for Unity (pages 274–291): Catherine AllgorChapter Eighteen James Madison and Montpelier: The Rhythms of Rural Life (pages 292–305): David B. MatternChapter Nineteen James Madison and the Dilemma of American Slavery (pages 306–323): Jeff BroadwaterChapter Twenty James Monroe's Political Thought: The People the Sovereigns (pages 324–342): Arthur ScherrChapter Twenty?One James Monroe, 1758–1783: Student and Soldier of the American Revolution (pages 343–358): Daniel PrestonChapter Twenty?Two James Monroe and the Confederation, 1781–1789: The Making of a Virginia Statesman (pages 359–374): Robert W. SmithChapter Twenty?Three James Monroe in the 1790s: A Republican Leader (pages 375–390): William M. FerraroChapter Twenty?Four James Monroe as Governor of Virginia and Diplomat Abroad, 1799–1810: A Revolution of Principles and the Triumph of Pragmatism (pages 391–404): David A. NicholsChapter Twenty?Five James Monroe as Secretary of State and Secretary of War, 1809–1817: Toward Republican Strategic Sobriety (pages 405–420): Mackubin Thomas OwensChapter Twenty?Six James Monroe, James Madison, and the War of 1812: A Difficult Interlude (pages 421–437): J. C. A. StaggChapter Twenty?Seven President James Monroe's Domestic Policies, 1817–1825: “To Advance the Best Interests of Our Union” (pages 438–455): Michael J. McManusChapter Twenty?Eight President James Monroe and Foreign Affairs, 1817–1825: An Enduring Legacy (pages 456–471): Sandra MoatsChapter Twenty?Nine The Domestic Life of James Monroe: The Man at Home (pages 472–488): Meghan C. BudingerChapter Thirty James Monroe and Thomas Jefferson: Republican Government and the British Challenge to America, 1780–1826 (pages 489–504): Michael SchwarzChapter Thirty?One James Monroe and James Madison: Republican Partners (pages 505–520): Brook PostonChapter Thirty?Two James Madison and James Monroe Historiography: A Tale of Two Divergent Bodies of Scholarship (pages 521–539): Peter Daniel Haworth