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Focusing on Seventeenth-Century English political philosophy and Nineteenth-Century American culture, Mark Kann challenges the widely-held view that American political institutions are grounded in the primacy of individualism. Liberal thinkers have long been concerned that men are too passionate and selfish to exercise individual rights without causing social chaos. Kann demonstrates how a desperate search to answer the man question began to revolutionize gender relations He examines "the other liberal tradition in America" which downplays the value of individualism, elevates the ongoing significance of an "engendered civic virtue," and incorporates classical republicanism into the fabric of modern political discourse.

The author traces the cultural conditioning of the white middle class that produced the ideal of self-sacrificing wives whose lives were devoted to creating a haven for their husbands and a school of virtue for their sons. Upon leaving home, these young men were to be schooled in manliness in the military in order to be capable of assuming positions of power as they were vacated by their fathers’ generation. Thus, in the norms of fatherhood, fraternity, womanhood, and militarism, the male’s individualism was conditioned with a strong dose of civic virtue.

Table of Contents

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  1. Cover
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  1. Frontmatter
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  1. Contents
  2. p. viii
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  1. Preface
  2. pp. x-xii
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  1. Introduction: Individualism, Civic Virtues, and Gender
  2. pp. 1-32
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  1. Part One: English Origins
  2. pp. 33-36
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  1. Chapter 1: On the Man Question
  2. pp. 37-64
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  1. Chapter 2: On the Woman Question
  2. pp. 65-89
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  1. Chapter 3: On the Youth Question
  2. pp. 90-114
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  1. Part Two: Locke's Legacy
  2. pp. 115-118
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  1. Chapter 4: Fathers and Sons
  2. pp. 119-142
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  1. Chapter 5: Citizens and the State
  2. pp. 143-165
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  1. Chapter 6: Women and Warriors
  2. pp. 166-188
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  1. Part Three: Engendered Virtue
  2. pp. 189-192
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  1. Chapter 7: In Search of Fathers
  2. pp. 193-218
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  1. Chapter 8: In Search of Fraternity
  2. pp. 219-244
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  1. Chapter 9: The Keepers of Civic Virtue
  2. pp. 245-269
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  1. Chapter 10: Martial Virtue
  2. pp. 270-293
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  1. Conclusion: Fortune is a Man
  2. pp. 295-316
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  1. Notes
  2. pp. 317-355
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  1. Index
  2. pp. 357-364
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