Grassroots Leviathan
Agricultural Reform and the Rural North in the Slaveholding Republic
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Johns Hopkins University Press
Published:1st Mar '23
Should be back in stock very soon
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£48.50(9781421439327)

How a massive agricultural reform movement led by northern farmers before the Civil War recast Americans' relationships to market forces and the state.
Recipient of The Center for Civil War Research's 2021 Wiley-Silver Book Prize, Winner of the Theodore Saloutos Memorial Award by the Agricultural History Society
In this sweeping look at rural society from the American Revolution to the Civil War, Ariel Ron argues that agricultural history is central to understanding the nation's formative period. Upending the myth that the Civil War pitted an industrial North against an agrarian South, Grassroots Leviathan traces the rise of a powerful agricultural reform movement spurred by northern farmers. Ron shows that farming dominated the lives of most Americans through almost the entire nineteenth century and traces how middle-class farmers in the "Greater Northeast" built a movement of semipublic agricultural societies, fairs, and periodicals that fundamentally recast Americans' relationship to market forces and the state.
Ariel Ron's engagingly written Grassroots Leviathan is an agricultural, political, economic, and intellectual history that is also informed by soil science, chemistry, education, and legal studies.
—The Center for Civil War Research
In recovering the stakes of antebellum agricultural society, Grassroots Leviathan upends conventional wisdom about urban-rural divides in U.S. society and revives a remarkable political economic formation in which popular, democratic developmentalism successfully won out over reactionary, vested interests.
—Boston Review
- Winner of Theodore Saloutos Memorial Award 2020 (United States)
- Winner of of the 20 2021 (United States)
ISBN: 9781421446721
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 21mm
Weight: 454g
324 pages