Saul
Cornell.
The Other Founders: Anti-Federalism and the Dissenting Tradition in America
1788-1828.
Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1999. xvi + 327 pp.
Acknowledgments, list of maps, list of abbreviations, a note on the notes,
appendices, index, map. $55.00 (cloth), ISBN 0-8078-4786-0 ISBN
0-8078-2503-4, ISBN $19.95 (paper), ISBN .
Reviewed
by:
Scott D. Gerber , Roger Williams University School of Law.
Published by:
H-Law
(June, 2000)
The American Political Tradition
Revisited
Saul
Cornell is an assistant professor of history at Ohio State University.
The Other Founders is his first book. In the book's Epilogue (p. 303),
Cornell takes the legendary Richard Hofstadter to task for allegedly failing
to appreciate the impact of Anti-Federalism on, in Hofstadter's famous
phrase, "the American political tradition."[1] No one can accuse Cornell of
lacking moxie.
I
became acquainted during the course of my own research with an article
Cornell had published in the William and Mary Quarterly on
postmodernism in the study of early American history.[2] I had found the
article to be both informative and well-crafted. Consequently, I jumped at
the chance to review his book on Anti-Federalism. To my surprise -- but to
the delight of traditional historians, I'm sure -- I discovered that
postmodernism makes only occasional appearances in Cornell's book.
The
book -- a dramatically reconceptualized version of Cornell's University of
Pennsylvania Ph.D. dissertation -- is a straightforward exegesis of "the
role Anti-Federalism played in the evolution of a dissenting tradition of
political and constitutional thought over the first four decades of America's
history" (p. viii). However, as Cornell points out in a number of places in
his book, Anti-Federalism has played a role in political and constitutional
thought during almost every period of America's
history. One only need peruse Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas's
landmark dissenting opinion in U.S. Term Limits, Inc. v. Thornton
(1995) to appreciate this fact.[3] Indeed, Ronald Reagan's America -- of
which Justice Thomas is among the most favorite of sons -- was, for the most
part, Anti-Federalism writ large. Hence, Anti-Federalist ideas have not
always been limited to a dissenting role in the America mind.
The
Other Founders
is divided into three parts. Part I examines, not surprisingly, the public
debate over the ratification of the Constitution of the United States. Part
II explores the role of Anti-Federalist ideas in the rise of
Democratic-Republicanism. Part III analyzes the period 1800-1828.
What
ties together these seemingly disparate parts of Cornell's account is his
demonstration of how Anti-Federalism was able to both change and stay the
same during this forty-year time span. Cornell writes: "In contrast to the
approach of traditional political or constitutional history, I have
concentrated on how this evolving tradition was shaped by a constantly
shifting set of texts that defined what Anti-Federalism meant at various
moments. Whereas older approaches have tended to homogenize and reify
Anti-Federalism, assuming that it was an unchanging construct, I have tried
to show the persistence of certain themes while demonstrating how this
tradition was evolving and being constantly reshaped" (p. 9).
Cornell's exploration of Anti-Federalism and the Constitution -- Part I of
his book -- comprises four chapters. His principal point in this first part
is that Anti-Federalist thought was not monolithic. For example, there often
were major differences between the ideas and arguments propounded by
so-called "elite" Anti-Federalists and those of the "popular" (in other
words, middling and plebeian) classes of Anti-Federalists. With respect to
the former, Cornell concludes, "What elite Anti-Federalists feared most was
corruption, the potential of any group of men, no matter how virtuous, to
exalt their own interests or those of some faction and ignore the common
good. Elite opponents of the Constitution were eager to preserve an
aristocracy of virtue or merit -- a natural aristocracy" (p. 80). By
contrast, middling and plebeian Anti-Federalists "each championed a
democratic critique of the Constitution. A principal target of their attack
was natural aristocracy" (p. 119). (Cornell is quick to point out that there
were differences between middling and plebeian Anti-Federalists as well.)
Part
II, wherein Cornell explores how Anti-Federalism was "transformed" after the
ratification of the Constitution, is divided into three chapters. Central to
this portion of Cornell's analysis are the different texts that commentators
invoked to buttress their dissenting arguments. Here, Cornell builds on a
point he raised earlier -- that, during the debate over the ratification of
the Constitution in 1787-1788, a handful of texts defined Anti-Federalist
thought. In the 1790s those texts were replaced by the published proceedings
of the state ratifying conventions and, later still, by James Madison's 1800
report to the Virginia legislature (among other texts). Cornell devotes the
opening chapter of Part II to explaining how the Anti-Federalists -- shorn
of the pejorative label "Anti-Federalists" (they more or less eventually
became known as "Democratic-Republicans") -- became a "loyal opposition"
under the Constitution they had worked so hard to defeat. The second chapter
in this part carries forward this theme, most notably by examining
Anti-Federalist efforts to defeat the centralizing tendencies of Hamiltonian
Federalism. The final chapter in Part II, "The Limits of Dissenting
Constitutionalism," describes how the most radical facet of Anti-Federalist
thought -- epitomized most dramatically by the famous Whiskey Rebellion of
1794 -- almost brought an end to Anti-Federalism itself. However, Cornell
insists, Anti-Federalism once again demonstrated its ability to adapt to
changing circumstances: it simply dropped the most radical of the plebeian
ideas and pressed ahead with the arguments advanced by elite and middling
Anti-Federalists.
This
more streamlined version of Anti-Federalist thought occupies the three
chapters in the third and final part of Cornell's book. He revisits the 1795
debate over the Jay Treaty, the outcry over the Sedition Act of 1798, the
crisis involving the Bank of the United States,
and the Nullification controversy of 1828 to make his case for the
continuing significance of Anti-Federalist ideas during the 1800-1828
period. And in a fit of synchronicity that was obviously too good to resist,
Cornell closes his discussion by applauding the underappreciated Martin Van
Buren for best capturing the impact that the equally underappreciated
Anti-Federalism had on the American regime: "The most important political
figure to champion [Anti-Federalist] ideals [in the post-ratification era]
was Martin Van Buren, who recognized that it was the Anti-Federalists, not
the Federalists, who represented the spirit of American politics and
constitutionalism. The 'Anti-Federalist Mind,' Van Buren concluded, was the
mind of America" (p. 302).
Although Cornell is plainly taking poetic license with this last statement,
it is hard to deny the influence that Anti-Federalism has had, and continues
to have, on the American regime. For example, Cornell correctly points out
that James Madison himself -- the so-called "father of the Constitution" and
one of the principal authors of The Federalist -- came to adopt many,
if not most, Anti-Federalist ideas. And, as I mentioned at the outset of
this review, contemporary America has been largely shaped by the presidency
of Ronald Reagan, and hence by Anti-Federalism itself.
This
said, scholars trained in the discipline of history will likely find little
new in Cornell's account of Anti-Federalism. However, lawyers and political
scientists with a penchant for invoking history probably will -- especially
those prone to indulging in "law-office history" to discern the "original
understanding" of the Constitution.
To be
fair, though, it is important to emphasize that, just as lawyers and
political scientists can learn from historians such as Cornell, so too can
historians learn from their colleagues in law schools and political science
departments. For example, the biggest problem I had as a lawyer and
political scientist with Cornell's otherwise excellent book was its tendency
-- shared by many books written by historians -- to miss the forest for the
trees. To make my point more directly, Cornell fails to appreciate that the
most significant text in American history is not The Federalist or
the myriad of Anti-Federalist texts he discusses in his book -- or even the
Constitution itself -- but rather the Declaration of Independence: the
founding document of the American regime, and the document that best
articulates our origins, purposes, and ideals as a nation. In my judgment,
it is only by exploring the political philosophy of the Declaration, and its
impact on America's history, that we can truly come to grips with the
"American political tradition."[4] Indeed, many of the Anti-Federalists --
the very subjects of Cornell's book -- emphasized this fact.
Space
constraints permit me to mention but one example: Mercy Otis Warren in her
Observations on the New Constitution. She wrote: "All writers on
government agree, and the feelings of the human mind witness the truth of
these political axioms, that man is born free and possessed of certain
unalienable rights -- that government is instituted for the protection,
safety, and happiness of the people, and not for the profit, honour, or
private interest of any man, family, or class of men -- That the origin of
all power is in the people, and that they have an incontestible right to
check the creatures of their own creation, vested with certain powers to
guard the life, liberty and property of the community."[5]
Notes
[1].
Richard Hofstadter, The American Political Tradition and the Men Who Made
It (New York: Knopf, 1948).
[2].
See Saul Cornell, "Early American History in a Postmodern Age,"
William and Mary Quarterly 50 (April 1993): 329-41. See generally
Scott Douglas Gerber, ed., Seriatim: The Supreme Court Before John
Marshall (New York: New York University Press, 1998).
[3].
See generally Scott Douglas Gerber, First Principles: The
Jurisprudence of Clarence Thomas (New York: New York University Press,
1999). Cornell cites Thomas's concurring opinion in McIntyre v. Ohio
Elections Commission (1995) as an example of the Justice's
Anti-Federalism. Term Limits is a far more important case, however,
and far more effective an illustration of Cornell's point.
[4].
On this point, see generally Scott Douglas Gerber, To Secure These
Rights: The Declaration of Independence and Constitutional Interpretation
(New York: New York University Press, 1995).
[5].
As quoted in ibid., 66 n.*. See generally Herbert J. Storing, What the
Anti-Federalists Were For (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1981)
(arguing that the Anti-Federalists were liberals in the "decisive sense" of
regarding the end of government as the protection of individual rights, not
the cultivation of virtue or the promotion of some organic common good).
Library
of Congress
Call Number: E310 .C79 1999
Subjects:
*
Constitutional history--United States
*
Federal government--United States--History--18th century
*
Federal government--United States--History--19th century
*
Dissenters--United States--History--18th century
*
Dissenters--United States--History--19th century
*
United States--Politics and government--1783-1865
Citation: Scott D. Gerber . "Review of Saul Cornell, The Other Founders:
Anti-Federalism and the Dissenting Tradition in America 1788-1828," H-Law,
H-Net Reviews, June, 2000. URL:
http://www.h-net.org/reviews/showrev.cgi?path=32573960309626.
“Arguing that earlier scholars have made the mistake of
portraying Anti-Federalism as a monolithic movement, Cornell sets out to
study it in all its diversity, examining a shifting set of texts that
represent different class, regional, and political views…The result is
rewarding: a book that is both good history and good theory, and a
treatment of Anti-Federalist thought that is more historically nuanced and
more theoretically sophisticated than any we have had before.”
Michael Lienesch, review of The Other Founders:
Anti-Federalism and the Dissenting Tradition in America 1788-1828, by
Saul Cornell, The William and Mary Quarterly, 57 (July 2000):
711-715.