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Tax-exempt? | Americanization of the Common Law The Impact of Legal Change on Massachusetts Society, 1760-1830 Americanization of the Common Law remains one of the standard works on the transformation of law in America from the late colonial period to the end of the early republic. In a straightforward manner, William E. Nelson analyzes the profound ideological movement that grew out of the American Revolution and caused substantial structural change in the legal and social order of Massachusetts and, by extension, in the nation at large. The Revolution, Nelson argues, transformed a hierarchical and communitarian legal and social order into an egalitarian and individualistic one. For this edition, Nelson has written a new preface in which he discusses the book's initial reception and the relevant historiographical issues that have arisen since it was first published in 1975. ISBN 0820315877 paper • $24.95 304 pp. • 6 1/8 x 9 1/4 in."[This is] one of those exceptional first books that with the passage of time may become a classic of historical literature.... Even the curious first-time reader of American legal history will profit from the engaging and informative discussion of the impact of the Revolution upon Massachusetts law, as well as the economic and social life of the province." Richard B. Morris, American Journal of Legal History"Americanization of the Common Law is a subtle analysis of the transforming effects of the American Revolution on the development of American society. . . . It will be important for anyone interested in the origins of modern America, for while the technical legal scholarship is masterful, the controlling ideas are not narrowly legal but broadly historical and imaginative, and the writing throughout is clear and concise." Bernard Bailyn |
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