Declaring the Revolution: America's Printed Path to Independence
By David M. Rubenstein (Preface by), Mazy Boroujerdi (Editor), Jill Lepore (Foreword by), Danielle Allen (Contribution by), Robert J. Allison (Contribution by), David Armitage (Contribution by), Benjamin L. Carp (Contribution by), Joanne B. Freeman (Contribution by), Woody Holton (Contribution by), Donald F. Johnson (Contribution by), Peter S. Onuf (Contribution by), Jack Rakove (Contribution by), Alan Shaw Taylor (Contribution by), Gordon Wood (Contribution by), Robinson Woodward-Burns (Contribution by)
Hardcover
$60.00
By David M. Rubenstein (Preface by), Mazy Boroujerdi (Editor), Jill Lepore (Foreword by), Danielle Allen (Contribution by), Robert J. Allison (Contribution by), David Armitage (Contribution by), Benjamin L. Carp (Contribution by), Joanne B. Freeman (Contribution by), Woody Holton (Contribution by), Donald F. Johnson (Contribution by), Peter S. Onuf (Contribution by), Jack Rakove (Contribution by), Alan Shaw Taylor (Contribution by), Gordon Wood (Contribution by), Robinson Woodward-Burns (Contribution by)
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An exploration of the significant role that print media played in the American Revolution and the formation of the United States
Declaring the Revolution explores how the thirteen American colonies used printed materials to achieve their independence from Great Britain. The Declaration of Independence did not appear in isolation; it was one in a long series of declaratory printings—from the Stamp Act in 1765 to the Treaty of Paris in 1783—that confronted America’s relationship to its parent ...






















