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- W2062011025 abstract "Republicanism has dominated the historiographies of English and American political thought for the past two decades.' Its success derives principally from J. G. A. Pocock's The Machiavellian Moment, which presents a sweeping vision of an ancient Aristotelian republican language that persisted for centuries in the mental landscape of the western world. Resurrected in Renaissance Florence, the language of republicanism continued to resonate powerfully in Stuart and Hanoverian Britain and colonial America. Pocock and those sympathetic to his work attributed the power and significance of republicanism to its internal discursive coherence over time; because of its deep roots in the European classical and Renaissance past, republicanism-not liberalism-provided the intellectual weapon with which the English and the Americans rebelled against the Stuart and Hanoverian monarchies. Pocock's provocative repudiation of the significance of John Locke and liberalism, as well as his suggestion that the revolutions of 1641, 1688, and 1776 were animated not by a utopian, forward-looking political ideology but by a backward-looking desire to restore a classical political order, generated a still-ongoing academic debate.2 This paper is the result of a Mellon summer seminar on early modern political thought (Northwestern University, July 1999). Thanks especially to Timothy Breen, Edward Muir, Alison Brown, Sean Field, and the anonymous reviewers of JHI. ' On The Machiavellian Moment the literature is too extensive for comprehensive citation; but see Quentin Skinner, Liberty Before Liberalism (Cambridge, 1998); Philip Pettit, Republicanism: A Theory of Freedom and Government (Oxford, 1997); Robert E. Shalhope, Toward a Republican Synthesis: The Emergence of an Understanding of Republicanism in American Historiography, William and Mar' Quarterly, 29 (1972), 49-80. 2 See Republicanism, Liberty, and Commercial Societv; 1649-1776, ed. D. Wootton (Stanford, 1994); Joyce Appleby, Liberalism and Republicanism in the Historical Imagination (Cambridge, Mass., 1992), 279; Steven Pincus, Neither Machiavellian Moment nor Posses-" @default.
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- W2062011025 date "2001-01-01" @default.
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- W2062011025 title "Virtue, Commerce, and the Enduring Florentine Republican Moment: Reintegrating Italy into the Atlantic Republican Debate" @default.
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- W2062011025 doi "https://doi.org/10.1353/jhi.2001.0034" @default.
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