Seven Virginians: The Men Who Shaped Our Republic by John B. Boles (review)

IF 0.8 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY Pub Date : 2024-07-16 DOI:10.1353/soh.2024.a932564
Jeffrey J. Malanson
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According to Boles, these “seven men were born in the northeast quadrant of the colony of Virginia” and played “a vastly disproportionate role in the founding of this nation” (p. 1). The book’s first thirteen chapters tell the story of the country’s founding in a largely chronological narrative from the French and Indian War through the late 1820s. A fourteenth chapter on “Institution Builders” examines Marshall’s tenure as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and Jefferson’s role in founding the University of Virginia. A final chapter considers the legacies of Jefferson, Madison, Marshall, and Monroe regarding slavery and their influence on the effort to write a new constitution for the state of Virginia in 1829.</p> <p>Boles moves briskly through more than eighty years of history while trying to tell coherent stories about each Virginian, but he tries to do too much, and the book’s primary contribution is ultimately unclear. The narrative thrust of <em>Seven Virginians</em> is the chronology of America’s founding, often with Washington, Jefferson, or Madison at the center. Little space is left for the contributions of Mason, Henry, Monroe, and Marshall, who are not central to Boles’s conception of the founding. Devoting more space to their achievements and service would have helped readers to better understand who these four were as politicians and Virginians—especially so for Monroe, who is briefly described as an Antifederalist Francophile in the 1780s and 1790s and as a mildly pro-British nationalist in the 1810s, with little context provided to explain the transition. Monroe and Marshall are at least highlighted in chapters near the end of the book, but Henry and especially Mason receive short shrift. The same can be said of the putative unifying theme of the book—that these seven were all Virginians. Virginia, and the ways the state and its politics shaped who these leaders were, is not a prominent enough character in the book to make it feel as if we learned anything new about the founding or these leaders from this approach.</p> <p>Boles admits that “a book about seven white slaveholders will appear inappropriate or even repugnant to some readers in 2023,” but he justifies his topic by arguing that “it is important to see these men in all their complexities—good and bad—if we are to face our history honestly and with completeness” (p. 2). The problem is that Boles largely relegates any extended discussion of their legacies with slavery until the last chapter, separating this consideration from the primary narrative. More intentional engagement with questions like how their personal lives and financial fortunes were tied to slavery, how Virginia’s politics influenced their individual thinking, and how they conceptualized colonization in the 1800s could have helped readers better understand the intellectual and moral gymnastics these Virginians used to rationalize the liberty they proclaimed and the society they created. <strong>[End Page 606]</strong></p> <p>The premise of <em>Seven Virginians</em> ultimately could not fully be delivered on. Consideration of the influence of Virginia on who these seven founders were as leaders, and on the full arc of their careers both in and out of national politics, largely gives way to the weight of the founding narrative. This is unfortunate because a study of these seven Virginians that prioritized a deeper look at state identity and the evolution of their political and national thinking as the United States was formed and matured would have made for a truly fascinating study.</p> Jeffrey J. Malanson Williams College Copyright © 2024 The Southern Historical Association ... </p>","PeriodicalId":45484,"journal":{"name":"JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY","volume":"49 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.8000,"publicationDate":"2024-07-16","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/soh.2024.a932564","RegionNum":2,"RegionCategory":"历史学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"HISTORY","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • Seven Virginians: The Men Who Shaped Our Republic by John B. Boles
  • Jeffrey J. Malanson
Seven Virginians: The Men Who Shaped Our Republic. By John B. Boles. (Charlottesville and London: University of Virginia Press, 2023. Pp. xii, 392. $34.95, ISBN 978-0-8139-4909-3.)

John B. Boles’s Seven Virginians: The Men Who Shaped Our Republic provides a highly readable account of the “long revolutionary era” between the 1740s and 1830s as lived by George Mason, George Washington, Patrick Henry, Thomas Jefferson, James Madison, John Marshall, and James Monroe (p. 2). According to Boles, these “seven men were born in the northeast quadrant of the colony of Virginia” and played “a vastly disproportionate role in the founding of this nation” (p. 1). The book’s first thirteen chapters tell the story of the country’s founding in a largely chronological narrative from the French and Indian War through the late 1820s. A fourteenth chapter on “Institution Builders” examines Marshall’s tenure as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court and Jefferson’s role in founding the University of Virginia. A final chapter considers the legacies of Jefferson, Madison, Marshall, and Monroe regarding slavery and their influence on the effort to write a new constitution for the state of Virginia in 1829.

Boles moves briskly through more than eighty years of history while trying to tell coherent stories about each Virginian, but he tries to do too much, and the book’s primary contribution is ultimately unclear. The narrative thrust of Seven Virginians is the chronology of America’s founding, often with Washington, Jefferson, or Madison at the center. Little space is left for the contributions of Mason, Henry, Monroe, and Marshall, who are not central to Boles’s conception of the founding. Devoting more space to their achievements and service would have helped readers to better understand who these four were as politicians and Virginians—especially so for Monroe, who is briefly described as an Antifederalist Francophile in the 1780s and 1790s and as a mildly pro-British nationalist in the 1810s, with little context provided to explain the transition. Monroe and Marshall are at least highlighted in chapters near the end of the book, but Henry and especially Mason receive short shrift. The same can be said of the putative unifying theme of the book—that these seven were all Virginians. Virginia, and the ways the state and its politics shaped who these leaders were, is not a prominent enough character in the book to make it feel as if we learned anything new about the founding or these leaders from this approach.

Boles admits that “a book about seven white slaveholders will appear inappropriate or even repugnant to some readers in 2023,” but he justifies his topic by arguing that “it is important to see these men in all their complexities—good and bad—if we are to face our history honestly and with completeness” (p. 2). The problem is that Boles largely relegates any extended discussion of their legacies with slavery until the last chapter, separating this consideration from the primary narrative. More intentional engagement with questions like how their personal lives and financial fortunes were tied to slavery, how Virginia’s politics influenced their individual thinking, and how they conceptualized colonization in the 1800s could have helped readers better understand the intellectual and moral gymnastics these Virginians used to rationalize the liberty they proclaimed and the society they created. [End Page 606]

The premise of Seven Virginians ultimately could not fully be delivered on. Consideration of the influence of Virginia on who these seven founders were as leaders, and on the full arc of their careers both in and out of national politics, largely gives way to the weight of the founding narrative. This is unfortunate because a study of these seven Virginians that prioritized a deeper look at state identity and the evolution of their political and national thinking as the United States was formed and matured would have made for a truly fascinating study.

Jeffrey J. Malanson Williams College Copyright © 2024 The Southern Historical Association ...

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七位弗吉尼亚人:约翰-B-博尔斯所著的《塑造我们共和国的人》(评论)
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 弗吉尼亚七杰约翰-B-博尔斯(John B. Boles)著,杰弗里-J-马兰森(Jeffrey J. Malanson)译 七位维吉尼亚人:塑造我们共和国的人:塑造我们共和国的人。作者 John B. Boles。(夏洛茨维尔和伦敦:弗吉尼亚大学出版社,2023 年。第 xii 页,第 392 页。34.95美元,ISBN 978-0-8139-4909-3)。约翰-B-博尔斯(John B. Boles)的《弗吉尼亚七杰》(Seven Virginians:The Men Who Shaped Our Republic》以极高的可读性描述了乔治-梅森、乔治-华盛顿、帕特里克-亨利、托马斯-杰斐逊、詹姆斯-麦迪逊、约翰-马歇尔和詹姆斯-门罗在 17 世纪 40 年代到 18 世纪 30 年代之间的 "漫长的革命时代"(第 2 页)。博尔斯认为,这 "七个人出生在弗吉尼亚殖民地的东北角","在建国过程中发挥了极大的作用"(第 1 页)。本书的前十三章主要按时间顺序讲述了从法国与印第安人战争到 19 世纪 20 年代末的建国故事。第十四章 "制度建设者 "探讨了马歇尔担任最高法院首席大法官的任期以及杰斐逊在创建弗吉尼亚大学中的作用。最后一章探讨了杰斐逊、麦迪逊、马歇尔和门罗在奴隶制方面的遗产,以及他们对 1829 年弗吉尼亚州制定新宪法的影响。博尔斯轻快地回顾了八十多年的历史,同时试图讲述关于每个弗吉尼亚人的连贯故事,但他试图做的事情太多,本书的主要贡献最终并不明确。七位弗吉尼亚人》的叙事重点是美国建国的时间顺序,通常以华盛顿、杰斐逊或麦迪逊为中心。几乎没有篇幅介绍梅森、亨利、门罗和马歇尔的贡献,他们在博尔斯的建国理念中并不重要。如果能用更多篇幅介绍他们的成就和服务,将有助于读者更好地了解这四人作为政治家和弗吉尼亚人的身份--尤其是门罗,他在 17 世纪 80 年代和 90 年代曾被简短地描述为反联邦主义者中的法语爱好者,而在 18 世纪 10 年代又被描述为温和的亲英民族主义者,但几乎没有提供背景资料来解释这一转变。门罗和马歇尔至少在该书接近结尾的章节中得到了强调,但亨利,尤其是梅森却受到了冷落。本书的统一主题也是如此,即这七人都是弗吉尼亚人。弗吉尼亚州,以及该州及其政治塑造这些领导人的方式,在书中并不是一个足够突出的角色,以至于让人觉得我们似乎从这种方法中学到了关于建国或这些领导人的任何新知识。博尔斯承认,"对 2023 年的一些读者来说,一本关于七个白人奴隶主的书会显得不合适,甚至令人反感",但他为自己的选题辩解道,"如果我们要诚实、完整地面对我们的历史,就必须看到这些人的所有复杂性--好的和坏的"(第 2 页)。问题在于,博尔斯在很大程度上将对他们与奴隶制的关系的讨论推迟到了最后一章,从而将这一思考与主要叙述分离开来。更有意识地探讨他们的个人生活和经济财富是如何与奴隶制联系在一起的、弗吉尼亚州的政治是如何影响他们的个人思想的,以及他们在 19 世纪是如何构思殖民的等问题,可以帮助读者更好地理解这些弗吉尼亚人是如何用智力和道德的体操来合理化他们所宣称的自由和他们所创造的社会的。[七位弗吉尼亚人》的前提最终未能完全实现。考虑弗吉尼亚州对这七位创始人作为领袖的影响,以及对他们在国家政治内外的全部职业生涯的影响,在很大程度上要让位于建国叙事的分量。这是令人遗憾的,因为对这七位弗吉尼亚人的研究,如果能优先深入研究他们的州身份,以及他们的政治和民族思想在美国形成和成熟过程中的演变,将是一项真正引人入胜的研究。杰弗里-J.-马兰森威廉姆斯学院版权所有 © 2024 美国南方历史协会 ...
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