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INSIDE THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE: A historian and former presidential speechwriter traces the origins and legacy of the words and ideas that made America.
Illustrations and close readings of 60 original texts offer new insights on the American Revolution, the Civil War, and other key moments and figures in American history.
We hold these truths to be self-evident . . . all men are created equal . . . with certain inalienable rights . . . life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." 250 years after they were written, these words remain at once familiar and startling. What do they mean to us today? Do we understand them in the same way the Founders did? Historian and former presidential speechwriter Ted Widmer seeks to answer these questions by returning to where the nation's story began, the Declaration of Independence, to trace the remarkable history of how our national charter came to be and how it has shaped the democratic aspirations of Americans and others for more than two centuries.
Weaving together more than sixty fascinating original texts, Widmer finds in the words of succeeding generations of Americans--radicals and conservatives, Civil War combatants and civil rights leaders, presidents and philosophers--the key to understanding the extraordinary durability of America's founding ideas.
An expert guide, Widmer introduces us to:
The voices gathered here are impassioned, and though often at odds, all are united in the belief that the Declaration reveals something crucial about the American people and the quest for human freedom. As we mark the 250th anniversary of our independence, The Living Declaration encourages us to look anew at a vital American text whose history is still unfolding.
TED WIDMER is Distinguished Lecturer at Macaulay Honors College (City University of New York), former Director, John Carter Brown Library (Brown University), and former speechwriter and Senior Advisor to President Bill Clinton. He is the author of Lincoln on the Verge: Thirteen Days to Washington, which won the Lincoln Forum Book Prize in 2020. He has edited numerous works including, for Library of America, American Speeches: Political Oratory (2006) in two volumes. He writes regularly about American history in The Washington Post, The New Yorker, and The New York Times, where he helped create the Disunion feature about the Civil War.