Introduction.
Chronology.
Part I: The Discovery of Democracy in America:.
Preliminary Note.
Illustration: Map of the American Voyage.
1. Travel Letters: First Impressions of America and Important Sketches of Democracy in America, 1831.
2. Excerpts from American Notebooks: Tocqueville's Conversations with His American Informants; Travel Impressions on the Road.
3. Volume One of Democracy in America, 1835.
Part II: Great Britain, France, and the United States:.
Preliminary Note.
4. Discovery of England, Poverty, Pauperism, and Social Policy, 1835-1837.
5. Ambitions, Marriage, and Tocqueville's Views of His Own Brand of Liberalism, 1833-1840.
6. Volume Two of Democracy in America.
Part III: The Years in Politics:.
Preliminary Note.
7. Tocqueville's Political Philosophy.
8. Tocqueville the Colonialist.
9. Tocqueville in 1848.
10. Tocqueville Retires from Political Life and Returns to Writing.
Part IV: The Return to The Old Regime and the Revolution:.
Preliminary Note.
11. The Old Regime and the Revolution Volume One.
12. The Old Regime and the Revolution Volume Two.
13. Last days.
Suggestions for Further Reading.
Note on Sources and Translations.
About the Editors.
Olivier Zunz is Commonwealth Professor of History at the University of Virginia and president of the Tocqueville Society. He is the author of The Changing Face of Inequality (1982), Making America Corporate (1990), and Why the American Century? (1998). He is also the editor of Reliving the Past (1985), and co-editor of The Landscape of Modernity (1992) and Social Contracts under Stress (2002).
Alan S. Kahan is Associate Professor of History at Florida International University. He is the author of Aristocratic Liberalism, The Social and Political Thought of Jacob Burckhardt, John Stuart Mill, and Alexis de Tocqueville (1992, 2001), and the translator of Tocqueville's The Old Regime and the Revolution (vol. 1: 1998, vol. 2: 2001).
“This fine volume should become the standard source of
Tocqueville's writings in the Anglophone world. Now that ideologues
are trying to highjack Tocqueville for their own partisan purposes,
it is particularly valuable to have this splendid collection that
reflects the depth of Tocqueville's insights into democracy,
liberty, and the delicate balance between them on both sides of the
Atlantic. By including the best of Tocqueville's work on a wide
range of topics and providing lucid commentary, Zunz and Kahan
offer readers an accurate, historically grounded understanding of
one of the 19th century's most brilliant thinkers.” James T.
Kloppenberg, Harvard University
“A collection like this has been needed for a long time. It is
accessible, broad-ranging, ably translated and superbly edited.
Anyone who appreciates the genius of this greatest of French
political writers will find it both a handy reference, and a source
of delightful surprises.” David A. Bell, The Johns Hopkins
University
"Highly Recommended. General readers, and lower-division
undergraduates and above." P.Coby, Smith College
"The Tocqueville Reader... is a splendid selection from
Tocqueville's works that reflects the originality and depth of his
ideas on democracy, liberty and modern society" Aurelian Craiutu,
Indiana University
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