Break It Up: Secession, Division, and the Secret History of America's Imperfect Union

Little, Brown and Company

$17.11 - $36.46
(No reviews yet) Write a Review
UPC:
9780316510608
Maximum Purchase:
2 units
Binding:
Hardcover
Publication Date:
8/18/2020
Release Date:
8/18/2020
Author:
Kreitner, Richard
Language:
English: Published; English: Original Language; English
Edition:
Illustrated
Pages:
496
Adding to cart… The item has been added

From journalist and historian Richard Kreitner, a "powerful revisionist account"of the most persistent idea in American history: these supposedly United States should be broken up (Eric Foner). The novel and fiery thesis of Break It Up is simple: The United States has never lived up to its nameand never will. The disunionist impulse may have found its greatest expression in the Civil War, but as Break It Up shows, the seduction of secession wasnt limited to the South or the nineteenth century. It was there at our founding and has never gone away. With a scholars command and a journalists curiosity, Richard Kreitner takes readers on a revolutionary journey through American history, revealing the power and persistence of disunion movements in every era and region. Each New England town after Plymouth was a secession from another; the thirteen colonies viewed their Union as a means to the end of securing independence, not an end in itself; George Washington feared separatism west of the Alleghenies; Aaron Burr schemed to set up a new empire; John Quincy Adams brought a Massachusetts towns petition for dissolving the United States to the floor of Congress; and abolitionist William Lloyd Garrison denounced the Constitution as a pro-slavery pact with the devil. From the cold civil war that pits partisans against one another to the modern secession movements in California and Texas, the divisions that threaten to tear America apart today have centuries-old roots in the earliest days of our Republic. Richly researched and persuasively argued, Break It Up will help readers make fresh sense of our fractured age.