Willing obedience : citizens, soldiers, and the progress of consent in America, 1776-1898
"Willing Obedience tells the story of Americans who worked out the simultaneous demands of liberty and obedience in fiction, military memoir, and political writing from the Revolution through the nineteenth century. In contrast to the European model of a subject's blind obedience to a monarch, Americans imagined an allegiance that preserved autonomy even as they consented to the constraints of a new republic. In particular, the book considers the case of the soldier, whose surprisingly complex relationship to authority is in fact representative of the situation of all citizens in a republic."--Jacket
Print Book, English, ©2004
Stanford University Press, Stanford, Calif., ©2004