Invisible Sovereign
Imagining Public Opinion from the Revolution to Reconstruction
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Johns Hopkins University Press
Published:19th Feb '16
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

An impressive and edifying contribution to the history of early national and antebellum American political thought. Invisible Sovereign is eloquent, witty, deeply researched, and attuned to the significant and interesting features of the many sources it analyzes and the issues it raises. -- David M. Henkin, University of California, Berkeley, author of City Reading: Written Words and Public Spaces in Antebellum New York
In the early American republic, the concept of public opinion was a recent-and ambiguous-invention. While appearing to promise a new style and system of democratic and deliberative politics, the concept was also invoked to limit self-rule, cement traditional prejudices and hierarchies, forestall deliberation, and marginalize dissent. As Americans contested the meaning of this essentially contestable idea, they expanded and contracted the horizons of political possibility and renegotiated the terms of political legitimacy. Tracing the notion of public opinion from its late eighteenth-century origins to the Gilded Age, Mark G. Schmeller's Invisible Sovereign argues that public opinion is a central catalyst in the history of American political thought. Schmeller treats it as a contagious idea that infected a broad range of discourses and practices in powerful, occasionally ironic, and increasingly contentious ways. Ranging across a wide variety of historical fields, Invisible Sovereign traces a shift over time from early "political-constitutional" concepts, which identified public opinion with a sovereign people and wrapped it in the language of constitutionalism, to more modern, "social-psychological" concepts, which defined public opinion as a product of social action and mass communication.
This is an extremely important contribution... He has written a fine book. It will be an essential point of departure for future explorations of public opinion in the American past Journal of the Civil War Era
ISBN: 9781421418704
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
Weight: 476g
256 pages