The American Revolution: Lecture 24 - Creating a Nation| 41mins
Director: Open Yale Courses | Producer: Open Yale Courses
Focus Years: 2010 | Country: United States
Synopsis:
Professor Freeman discusses the national debate over the proposed Constitution, arguing that in many ways, when Americans debated its ratification, they were debating the consequences and meaning of the Revolution. Some feared that a stronger, more centralized government would trample on the rights and liberties that had been won through warfare, pushing the new nation back into tyranny, monarchy, or aristocracy. The Federalist essays represented one particularly ambitious attempt to quash Anti-Federalist criticism of the Constitution. In the end, the Anti-Federalists did have one significant victory, securing a Bill of Rights to be added after the new Constitution had been ratified by the states.
The American Revolution: Lecture 24 - Creating a Nation
|
41mins
Search information, ideas, subjects related to this story:
Wikipedia :
- Alternative Education
- Anarchism
- Collaborative leadership
- Corruption
- Cross-cultural leadership
- Cultural Anthropology
- Cultural Behavior
- Cultural Diversity
- Cultural Heritage
- Cultural Psychology
- Culture
- Education
- Ethical leadership
- Global Governance
- Governance
- History
- History of Education
- Illiteracy
- International Relations
- Open Source Governance
- Panarchism
- Philiosophy of Politics
- Philosophy Of Education
- Philosophy of Politics
- Political Movements
- Politics
- Psychology Of Education
- Radical Transperancy
- Socio-cultural Evolution
- Sociocracy
- Sociocultural Evolution
- Sociology Of Education
- Special Education
- Warfare
- World Literacy Rate Index
Other Articles/Sites :
Send funds to team of this film/project:
NOTE: 100% of your funds are sent directly from here.
Close
This storyteller has yet to share/set a wallet for the direct fund transfers.
Shall we send an email request on your behalf?
Close
peace