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Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
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English
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UNION

Colin Woodard

The Struggle to Forge the Story of United States Nationhood

A timely examination of the myth of national unity in the fractured United States, and a thoughtful history of how the country came to be so divided.
UNION stands apart from other books about the divided United States for it is first and foremost a history, beginning with American Independence and chronicling how the myth of national unity was created -- reaching back to its beginnings to trace how this country got to where it is today.

Union tells the story of the struggle to create a national myth for the United States, one that could hold its many different regional cultures together and forge an American nationhood. It tells the dramatic tale of how the story of the US's national origins, identity, and purpose was intentionally created and fought over in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. On one hand, a small group of individuals--historians, political leaders, and novelists--fashioned and promoted a history that attempted to transcend and erase the fundamental differences and profound tensions between the nation's regional cultures. They believed that America had a God-given mission to lead humanity toward freedom, equality, and self-government and was held together by fealty to these ideals.

This emerging nationalist story was immediately and powerfully contested by another set of intellectuals and firebrands who argued that the United States was instead an ethno-state, the homeland of the allegedly superior "Anglo-Saxon" race, upon whom Divine and Darwinian favor shined. Their vision helped create a new federation -- the Confederacy -- prompting the bloody Civil War. While defeated on the battlefield, their vision later managed to win the war of ideas, capturing the White House in the early twentieth century, and achieving the first consensus, pan-regional vision of US nationhood in the years before the outbreak of the first World War. This narrower, more exclusive vision of America would be overthrown in mid-century, but it was never fully vanquished.

Woodard tells the story of the genesis and epic confrontations between these visions of the US's path and purpose through the lives of the key figures who created them, a cast of characters whose personal quirks and virtues, gifts and demons shaped the destiny of millions.
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Published 2020-06-16 by Viking

Comments

"In Union I set out to write a book that would reveal how the story of a shared nationhood was devised, disseminated, and ultimately upheld. What I discovered in the course of my research was an intellectual battle of the highest possible stakes that spanned a century and ultimately helped explain a great deal about the age in which we now live... At this writing our Republic faces existential dangers not unlike those of the 1820s, when the federation was sharply divided along regional lines and its members uncertain of what, if anything, held it together. The paths Union's principal characters fought over remain before us, and the survival of the United States is at stake in the choices we make about which one to follow."

Colin Woodard wrote a fascinating article about the U.S.'s response to COVID-19, tracing how it follows the regional lines he lays out in his bestselling book, American Nations. It's an intriguing read and highly recommend for anyone interested in how the United States is handling the coronavirus... Read more...

Overall, Woodward effectively shows how the country struggled to create a national myth, and an international image of unity. VERDICT Woodard is a gifted historiographer, and this excellent work will be appreciated by anyone interested in American history and how it came to be written.

Woodard is cited in Ted Anthony's article 'Me and we: Individual rights, common good and coronavirus': "The pandemic is presenting this classic individual liberty-common good equation. And the ethos of different parts of the country about this is very, very different. And it's pulling the country in all these different directions," says Colin Woodard... Read more...

...unusual but engaging collective biography.... Woodard succeeds in demonstrating the high stakes of master narratives, versions of the past that people choose as identities and stories in which they wish to live. National histories take countries to war, build and destroy empires, enslave and liberate people... Woodard does make visions of history into a kind of human drama. He writes with a storyteller's pace and vividness.

...ambitious and accessible narrative... This enlightening and character-driven account will resonate with progressive history buffs.

A sobering account of America's past fractures - and a reminder that they're anything but healed... The Civil War demonstrated how perilously close our country could come to the brink of destruction; fractures of race, economic inequality, and geography continue to trouble the United States. In the sobering Union, Woodard reminds us that we can still fail, the sinews of Amazon and mass consumption insufficient to keep us bound together. Read more...

Union is detailed and unflashy, and it contains many valuable historical lessons modern readers will find useful.

Launch Event with Longfellow/Maine Writers and Publishers Alliance (June 16th; In total, Colin will be doing virtual appearances for seven bookstores) Read more...

Chinese (smpl.): Social Sciences Academic Press

Woodard traces a gradual, emerging consensus of American unity. It's a dark tale. This country purchased its sense of itself as a unified whole at a high price, he writes: that of racial equality... For anyone who places a high value on thought, this book gives pause. Not just the familiar story of intellectuals drafted as mouthpieces, it shows how even the most exceptional minds serve prevailing currents. Woodard demonstrates that something more complicated than reason is always afoot, some swirl of politics, events, and wordless popular sentiment that sweeps the hapless thinker in its wake.

Colin Woodard was featured in The New Yorker as the primary source in an article titled, "Is America a Myth?" Throughout the article, Colin Woodard discusses the ever-widening rifts between the disparate cultures in the United States, and how it's uncertain how - or if - those divides can heal. "The idea that America has a shared past going back into the colonial period is a myth," Colin Woodard, the author of "Union: The Struggle to Forge the Story of United States Nationhood," told me. "We are very different Americas, each with different origin stories and value sets, many of which are incompatible. They led to a Civil War in the past and are a potentially incendiary force in the future."