Lexington Books
Pages: 268
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-3610-3 • Hardback • December 2017 • $123.00 • (£95.00)
978-1-4985-3612-7 • Paperback • November 2018 • $50.99 • (£39.00)
978-1-4985-3611-0 • eBook • December 2017 • $48.00 • (£37.00)
Michael J. Douma is assistant research professor and director of the Georgetown Institute for the Study of Markets and Ethics at the McDonough School of Business of Georgetown University.
Phillip W. Magness is visiting assistant professor of economics at Berry College.
Introduction, Michael J. Douma
Chapter 1: Beyond Laissez Faire and State Power: A Critical Look at the Transformation Thesis and Classical Liberalism in Nineteenth Century America, Scott Shubitz
Chapter 2: Classical Liberalism and the “New” History of American Capitalism, Phillip W. Magness
Chapter 3: The Historicity of Civil Liberties, a Liberal Predicament, Anthony Gregory
Chapter 4: Constituting Liberty: Toward a History and Science of Association, Lenore T. Ealy
Chapter 5: Some Roads Taken, and Not Taken, from the Progressive Era to the New Deal, David T. Beito
Chapter 6: A Manifesto for Liberty: Toward a New History of Civil Rights in US History, Jonathan Bean
Chapter 7: The End or Ends of Social History? The Reclamation of Old Fashioned Historicism in the Writing of Historical Narratives, Hans Eicholz
Chapter 8: History through a Classical Liberal Feminist Lens, Sarah Skwire
Chapter 9: Classical Liberalism in Eastern Europe: Very Vibrant but So Mild, Leonid Krasnozhon and Mykola Bunyk
Chapter 10: “Start the Economy”: Causation, Emergent Order, and Social Change in the Origins of Modern Economic Growth, Matthew Brown
Chapter 11: A Non-Manifesto of Liberal History, Alberto Garín
Historians who are classical liberals constitute a minority within a field that seems to be dominated by progressive, Marxist, feminist, postmodernist, and conservative schools. So it is refreshing and enlightening to have this insightful scholarly collection from some articulate classical liberal historians. Tackling such issues as historiography, the nature of capitalism, the role of social history, feminism, civil rights, civil liberties, and the origins of sustained economic growth, they reinvigorate a classical liberal approach to these profound historical questions.
— Jeff Hummel, San Jose State University
This is one of the freshest and most stimulating efforts to rethink the premises of modern historiography to appear in many years. While paying due respect to the collective and material forces that professional historians have come to regard as the principal drivers of historical change, the authors in this volume make a different commitment—to the priority of liberty and the dignity and agency of the individual person—in their accounts of the human past. The paths opened here by these authors are full of promise. May their enterprise flourish, and their efforts bear abundant fruit, and multiply.
— Wilfred M. McClay, University of Oklahoma