Abstract

Introduction: the revolution as historical object, philosophical subject and political modernity. Part 1 Toward independence - sovereignty and the rights of man: the birth and the end of the First English Empire and American independence the declaration of independence and the question of sovereignty the revolution as rupture?. Part 2 Free institutions - the representation of the common good and the individual: the birth of the United States - the war, politics, the post-war period history conceived - Republican institutions - radical Conservatives - Massachusetts and Virginia , the confederated state history reflected problems of political theory revolution and counterrevolution. Part 3 From Republican politics to liberal sociology: bankruptcy of the Confederation? toward the Constitution - the Virginia Plan the New Jersey plan how to represent popular sovereignty? to understand oneself as a revolutionary.

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