Synopses & Reviews
Americans of late have taken to waving the Constitution in the air and proclaiming, "The founders were on MY side! See, its all right here!" But these phantom constitutions bear little relation to the historical one.
By entering the world of the Constitutions framers, and experiencing it one day after the next as they did, Ray Raphael helps us understand how and why they created the document they did. Casting aside preconceptions and commonly held beliefs, he asks provocative questions that get to the heart of the document and its purposes: Was the aim of the Constitution really to limit government? Why didnt the framers include a Bill of Rights? Did they hate taxes? Was James Madison actually the "Father of the Constitution," as proclaimed in our textbooks? Can we find the true meaning of the Constitution by reading The Federalist Papers or by revealing the framers' "original intent"? The answers to these questions are bound to surprise and enlighten.
Before we can consider what the framers would do if they were alive today, we first need to see what they did during their own time, not in our terms, but theirs. Only then can we begin to resolve the sweeping question that affects us all: what does the Constitution, written at a different time, mean for us today? With this meticulously researched historical tour de force, Raphael sets the record straight—and sounds a vital call for a reasoned and evidence-driven debate about our founding document.
Review
"We all love myths, but Ray gets it right. His narrative sticks to the historical record, and his arguments are tightly reasoned.
Constitutional Myths is wonderfully lucid and highly informative." Edward J. Larson, Pulitzer Prizewinning author of
A Magnificent Catastrophe: The Tumultuous Election of 1800 and professor of history, Pepperdine University
"Ray Raphaels Constitutional Myths is a timely exposé about the ways in which Americans, and American politicians in particular, have frequently been misled by myths about the origins and history of the U.S. Constitution. It is an extraordinarily important and nuanced work of history that places the Constitution, and the men who created it, in their proper eighteenth-century context." Richard R. Beeman, author of Plain Honest Men: The Making of the American Constitution, and professor of history, University of Pennsylvania
"Tired of the nonsense that were being asked to believe about the Constitution and the founders? The universal antidote is this marvelous book. Ray Raphaels Constitutional Myths blends formidable historical research with rigorous argument and clear, direct prose. Raphael blasts to smithereens a whole constellation of tall tales about the Constitution, its origins, and its interpretation. Not only is it a blessed relief, its fun to watch Raphaels iconoclasm at work. Essential reading, now more than ever." R.B. Bernstein, author of The Founding Fathers Reconsidered and Thomas Jefferson
"Public officials have often had the strange experience of being confronted by angry citizens who demand that they stop violating the Constitution, citing as proof of such violations the failure to abide by imagined provisions that arent actually in the Constitution at all. In Constitutional Myths, Ray Raphael sets out to separate fact from fiction, the differences between the Constitution our Founders created and the one that exists only in our own desire for the political outcomes we prefer." former Congressman Mickey Edwards
"Take off your rose-colored glasses, people: The Founding Fathers embraced a strong federal government, at the risk of falling into anarchy and disintegration. Therein lies the kernel of the authors readable demystification of some of the ongoing crusades by conservatives touting the supremacy of 'originalism'. . . . With documents amply provided at the close of the text, Raphael provides a truly accessible teaching tool." Kirkus Reviews
Synopsis
With the entry of the Tea Party onto the political scene, the U.S. Constitution has become a political battleground, with liberals and conservatives trading fire over its meaning and intent. Amid all the hubbub, historian Ray Raphael was struck by how much
both sides got wrong, and how falsehoods have largely overtaken history in Americans understanding of the nations most important document. In
Constitutional Myths, he sorts out truth from fiction, juxtaposing what historians know about the Constitution with what most Americans (and politicians)
think they know about it.
The surprising misconceptions Raphael corrects in Constitutional Myths include:
The Framers embraced limited government.
The Framers were enlightened and disinterested statesmen, not politicians pushing special interests.
The Constitution promoted democracy and promised equality.
The Founding Fathers gave us the Bill of Rights.
The Constitution provided the final answer” and must forever endure.
Raphael offers readers an accessible new understanding of the Constitutionone that is sure to provoke and entertain Americans across the political spectrum.
About the Author
Ray Raphael is a Senior Research Fellow with Humboldt State University in Northern California. His sixteen books include A Peoples History of the American Revolution; Founding Myths: Stories That Hide Our Patriotic Past; and Mr. President: How and Why the Founders Created a Chief Executive.