The Hamilton Scheme
Auteur : William Hogeland
Date de publication : 2024-05-28
Ăditeur : Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Nombre de pages : 544
Résumé du livre
"William Hogeland is the best guide I have found to understanding how we today are, for good and evil, children of Alexander.â âJ. Bradford DeLong, professor of economics at the University of California, Berkeley, and author of Slouching Towards Utopia
How Alexander Hamilton embraced American oligarchy to jumpstart American prosperity.
âForgotten founderâ no more, Alexander Hamilton has become a global celebrity. Millions know his name. Millions imagine knowing the man. But what did he really want for the country? What risks did he run in pursuing those vaulting ambitions? Who tried to stop him? How did they fight? Itâs ironic that the Hamilton revival has obscured the manâs most dramatic battles and hardest-won achievementsâas well as downplaying unsettling aspects of his legacy.
Thrilling to the romance of becoming the one-man inventor of a modern nation, our first Treasury secretary fostered growth by engineering an ingenious dynamoâbanking, public debt, manufacturingâfor concentrating national wealth in the hands of a government-connected elite. Seeking American prosperity, he built American oligarchy. Hence his animus and mutual sense of betrayal with Jefferson and Madisonâand his career-long fight to suppress a rowdy egalitarian movement little remembered today: the eighteenth-century white working class.
Marshaling an idiosyncratic cast of insiders and outsiders, vividly dramatizing backroom intrigues and literal street fightsâand sharply dissenting from recent biographiesâWilliam Hogelandâs The Hamilton Scheme brings to life Hamiltonâs vision and the hard-knock struggles over democracy, wealth, and the meaning of America that drove the nationâs creation and hold enduring significance today.