50 pages • 1 hour read
James M. McphersonA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
McPherson articulates the ways in which the Civil War transformed the national identity and forged a modern United States. Specifically, he focuses on the transformation from a decentralized republic to a centralized polity and from an economy based on enslavement to a free-labor entrepreneurial capitalist economy. These two transformations are intertwined, as McPherson notes at the beginning of Chapter 7 when he states, “Slavery could not have been abolished without Union victory, and preservation of the United States as one nation became dependent on the destruction of slavery” (97). Chapter 2 indicates that the seeds of free-labor capitalism were present in the years leading up to the war, as evidenced by the fact that the Forty-Niners in California did not want to compete with a labor force comprised of enslaved people. McPherson observes that once enslavement was abolished, the emergence of a centralized economic system became possible. McPherson’s discussion of America’s transformation from a decentralized republic to a centralized polity includes his analysis of the federal government’s decision to tax people directly, to institute an Internal Revenue Bureau, and to create a national currency and a federally chartered banking system.
The transformation to a centralized polity is also related to the 14th and 15th Amendments’ expansion of the federal government’s power to intervene in the lives of American citizens.
By James M. Mcpherson
American Civil War
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War
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