Winner of the Bancroft Prize
Winner of the James Bradford Best Biography Prize, Society for Historians of the Early American Republic
Finalist, Literary Award for Nonfiction, Library of Virginia
Finalist, George Washington Prize
James Madison's Notes on the 1787 Constitutional Convention have acquired nearly unquestioned authority as the description of the U.S. Constitution's creation. No document provides a more complete record of the deliberations in Philadelphia or depicts the Convention's charismatic figures, crushing disappointments, and miraculous triumphs with such narrative force. But how reliable is this account?
"[A] superb study of the Constitutional Convention as selectively reflected in Madison's voluminous notes on it Scholars have been aware that Madison made revisions in the Notes but have not intensively explored them. Bilder has looked closely indeed at the Notes and at his revisions, and the result is this lucid, subtle book. It will be impossible to view Madison's role at the convention and read his Notes in the same uncomplicated way again An accessible and brilliant rethinking of a crucial moment in American history."
-Robert K. Landers, Wall Street Journal
Winner of the Bancroft Prize
Winner of the James Bradford Best Biography Prize, Society for Historians of the Early American Republic
Finalist, Literary Award for Nonfiction, Library of Virginia
Finalist, George Washington Prize
James Madison's Notes on the 1787 Constitutional Convention have acquired nearly unquestioned authority as the description of the U.S. Constitution's creation. No document provides a more complete record of the deliberations in Philadelphia or depicts the Convention's charismatic figures, crushing disappointments, and miraculous triumphs with such narrative force. But how reliable is this account?
"[A] superb study of the Constitutional Convention as selectively reflected in Madison's voluminous notes on it Scholars have been aware that Madison made revisions in the Notes but have not intensively explored them. Bilder has looked closely indeed at the Notes and at his revisions, and the result is this lucid, subtle book. It will be impossible to view Madison's role at the convention and read his Notes in the same uncomplicated way again An accessible and brilliant rethinking of a crucial moment in American history."
-Robert K. Landers, Wall Street Journal
Mary Sarah Bilder is Founders Professor of Law and Michael and Helen Lee Distinguished Scholar, Boston College Law School.
[A] superb study of the Constitutional Convention as selectively
reflected in Madison’s voluminous notes on it…Scholars have been
aware that Madison made revisions in the Notes but have not
intensively explored them. Bilder has looked closely indeed at the
Notes and at his revisions, and the result is this lucid, subtle
book. It will be impossible to view Madison’s role at the
convention and read his Notes in the same uncomplicated way
again…An accessible and brilliant rethinking of a crucial moment in
American history.
*Wall Street Journal*
The reliability of Madison’s Notes as a credible contemporaneous
record of what really transpired in Philadelphia is being
challenged as never before in an important new book… Bilder, using
forensic techniques to date the changes [James Madison] made and
historical research to describe what was happening politically when
he made them, has made sense of the revisions, which began right
after the convention and continued up until his death. And many of
them amount to what we would now call ‘spin.’
*Washington Post*
A brilliant study of just how extensively Madison reshaped the
story of what happened at Philadelphia over his long lifetime.
*New York Review of Books*
A major contribution to our understanding of the Constitutional
Convention.
*Jack N. Rakove, author of The Annotated U.S. Constitution and
Declaration of Independence*
Bilder has written the definitive study of one of the most
influential texts in American constitutional history. She
demonstrates that Madison’s notes on the Philadelphia Convention
were never intended to preserve an impartial transcript of debates
for posterity. They were designed, rather, to serve the various
purposes of their author, which changed dramatically over the
decades. The text assumed its final form only when a much older
Madison felt it necessary to project the ideological allegiances of
Jeffersonian Republicanism backward onto the Convention. We will
never read this seminal document the same way again.
*Eric Nelson, author of The Royalist Revolution*
In this eye-opening book, Bilder employs advanced research
techniques to revise and correct our understanding of the written
record of the Constitutional Convention. Along the way, she offers
original and sometimes surprising new interpretations of many of
the events and controversies that gave rise to our Constitution.
Anyone who wants to understand the Constitution must take this book
into account.
*Michael McConnell, co-author of The Constitution of the United
States*
Every historian who has ever written about the Constitutional
Convention has used James Madison’s ‘Notes’ as a fundamental
primary source. And although nearly all are aware of the fact that
Madison revised his notes over time, no one has ever attempted a
systematic study of the nature of those revisions or of the
significant ways in which those changes might have altered our
understanding of the Convention. Madison’s Hand is an exceptionally
important piece of work that will have a profound impact on all
future work on the Constitutional Convention.
*Richard Beeman, author of Our Lives, Our Fortunes and Our
Sacred Honor*
For nearly two centuries, Madison’s ‘Notes’ have been regarded as
secular scripture: an inerrant, authoritative, and complete account
of the drafting of the Constitution. Bilder reveals them instead as
an intricate palimpsest, altered and expanded repeatedly between
1787 and Madison’s death in 1836—with each change subtly reflecting
the passions of the day rather than a quest for ‘original
understanding.’ What emerges from this important book is a more
human Madison, a more complex framing story, a new light on the
struggles of the early Republic, and a deeper regard for the
complexities and fascinations of American constitutional
history.
*Garrett Epps, author of American Epic: Reading the U.S.
Constitution*
A kind of biography of Madison’s notes…Bilder has done the first
intensive study of the actual paper on which Madison’s notes are
written, Madison’s handwriting in different parts of the notes, and
other aspects of the actual physical artifacts.
*American Conservative*
Thoroughly researched and elegantly written.
*Washington Times*
[Bilder’s] is a special kind of intellectual biography, concerned
with the intimate processes by which Madison formed and reformed
his ideas.
*Reviews in American History*
The great value of Bilder’s project emerges not from its specific
conclusions but rather from her interpretative methodology, and how
she applies it to illuminate Madison, his Notes, and the
Constitution’s creation. Her intricate, complex book is as clear as
a careful scholar and writer can make it, and her clarity is
particularly valuable in her explication of methodological
issues…Bilder reminds us that Madison and his colleagues were
creating a constitution for a specific polity at a specific time
and place…Future scholars may produce readings of the Notes and of
their evolution differing from Bilder’s, as she concedes in her
introduction—in fact, she invites such work. Anyone following in
Bilder’s footsteps will have to engage with her revolutionary book,
as all of us who study the Constitution’s origins and the Federal
Convention must do.
*New England Quarterly*
In this groundbreaking work, Bilder advances our understanding of
the Constitutional Convention and the evolution of James Madison’s
Notes.
*Choice*
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