

Elizabeth Cobbs, Times Higher Education, Honorable Mention for the 2018 PROSE Award in U.S. An important, necessary and convincing argument overall. The author offers a compelling overview of how the American Revolution impacted the rest of the world well into the 19th century and beyond., The Expanding Blaze is studded with interesting facts. The first major new intellectual history of the age of democratic revolution in decades, The Expanding Blaze returns the American Revolution to its global context.Ī fascinating global look at how the American Revolution didn't simply conclude with the independence of 13 colonies from Great Britain, and the creation of the United States of America. Rather, the Revolution continued to reverberate in Europe and the Americas for the next three-quarters of a century.This comprehensive history of the Revolution's international influence traces how American efforts to implement Radical Enlightenment ideas-including the destruction of the old regime and the promotion of democratic republicanism, self-government, and liberty-helped drive revolutions abroad, as foreign leaders explicitly followed the American example and espoused American democratic values. The Expanding Blaze reminds us that the American Revolution was an astonishingly radical event-and that it didn't end with the transformation and independence of America. Jonathan Israel, one of the world's leading historians of the Enlightenment, shows how the radical ideas of American founders such as Paine, Jefferson, Franklin, Madison, and Monroe set the pattern for democratic revolutions, movements, and constitutions in France, Britain, Ireland, the Netherlands, Belgium, Poland, Greece, Canada, Haiti, Brazil, and Spanish America. A major intellectual history of the American Revolution and its influence on later revolutions in Europe and the Americas The Expanding Blaze is a sweeping history of how the American Revolution inspired revolutions throughout Europe and the Atlantic world in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
