Liberty and Power:

Rosemarie Zagarri
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This essay argues that both George Washington and Mercy Otis Warren understood their experiences of the Revolutionary era through a shared discourse of classical republicanism, a set of beliefs that interpreted modern events in terms of their continuities with ancient Greece and Rome. By the time Washington became president, however, their beliefs had diverged, particularly in terms of assessing Washington’s stature as a hero in the classical republican mold. Warren, as a chronicler of the American Revolution, believed that she had remained true to the classical republican principles of virtue, honor, and self-sacrifice for the common good. She criticized Washington for having succumbed to the lure of power and fame. The difference in their gender roles contributed to the divergence in their understandings. While Warren’s anti-federalist ideals remained abstract and theoretical, Washington as president was forced to accommodate his principles to the complex realities of governing a new nation and enforcing the U.S. Constitution.
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自由与权力:
本文认为,乔治·华盛顿和默西·奥蒂斯·沃伦都是通过对古典共和主义的共同论述来理解他们在革命时代的经历的,古典共和主义是一套以古希腊和罗马的连续性来解释现代事件的信仰。然而,当华盛顿成为总统时,他们的信念已经出现分歧,特别是在评估华盛顿作为经典共和党模式英雄的地位方面。作为美国革命的编年史家,沃伦相信她一直忠于共和的美德、荣誉和为共同利益而自我牺牲的经典原则。她批评华盛顿屈服于权力和名望的诱惑。性别角色的不同导致了她们在理解上的分歧。虽然沃伦的反联邦主义理想仍然是抽象和理论性的,但作为总统的华盛顿被迫调整自己的原则,以适应治理一个新国家和执行美国宪法的复杂现实。
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