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For Fear of an Elective King
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Table of Contents

Introduction: The Title Controversy and the Early Presidency Chapter 1. "An Improper Distinction of Rank": The Persistence of Titles Chapter 2. The Third Body of Washington: Sovereignties in Confusion Chapter 3. Protecting the Presidency: A Republican Dilemma Chapter 4. Debating a "Doubtful Power": The Legislative Battle Engaged Chapter 5. "Strange Contradictions": The People Confront Status Distinction Chapter 6. A "Dangerous Vice": Leaders under Scrutiny Conclusion: The Path to American Democratic Leadership Appendix A: Senate Resolution on a Presidential Title Notes Bibliography Index

About the Author

Kathleen Bartoloni-Tuazon is Visiting Scholar at the First Federal Congress Project in Washington, D.C.

Reviews

"This is an outstanding work of historical writing. All of Bartoloni-Tuazon's assertions are strongly backed up with historical evidence. The book is thoroughly researched (with fifty-five pages of notes), and includes a very useful bibliography. In sum, this book is a balanced and thorough examination of an important episode in American history. The title controversy decided that America-at least until the twentieth century-would have a presidency of moderation with a lack of pageantry."-Benjamin Huggins, Journal of the American Revolution "[T]his is a first-rate scholarly work. The text supports the fact that the author has diligently researched the use of titles within the US during this period. Her research is also responsible for her deep knowledge of the national debate over a presidential title. Helpful to scholars and advanced students will be the 56 pages of notes and the 16-page bibliography. A mandatory acquisition for four-year institutions and major public libraries. Summing Up: Essential. Most public and academic levels/libraries."-J. J. Fox Jr., CHOICE, April 1, 2015 "This delightfully well-written and meticulously researched book is by far the fullest and finest study of the legislative debate over a presidential title, and it is the only study of the public debate over the controversy."-Stuart Leibiger, Journal of the Early Republic (Fall 2015) "...this book is tremendously rich in itshistorical account of the title controversy and in showingthe dynamics of that controversy in a new and interesting way. The author reveals that a controversy that hadpreviously seemed like nothing more than an odd 'sideshow'is actually illustrative of a fundamental shift inthe republican character of the country. She also demonstrates that the controversy played a decisive role inrepublicanizing the Constitution and, by doing so, making the Constitution stronger."-Benjamin A. Kleinerman, American Historical Review (February 2016) "Throughout, Bartoloni-Tuazon's deployment of well-chosen quotations rendersthe dispute, in all its iterations, freshly vivid...Bartoloni-Tuazon absolutely demonstrates the importance of the titles controversy to the early development of the US presidency and to our understanding of contemporary American political sensibilities. She also, not alwaysthe case with deeply researched work, tells a thoroughly good story."-Finn Pollard, American Studies (2015) "Kathleen Bartoloni-Tuazon has written asmall but ambitious work on the presidentialtitle debate that occupied the new Congressin May 1789. She offers a meticulously researched and well-written study of the controversy."-Sandra Moats, Journal of American History (March 2016) "Kathleen Bartoloni-Tuazonoffers in For Fear of an Elective King such an impressive analysis of high politics and political theory and sets up so effectively the social and cultural landscape within which the conversation unfolded that everyone interested in the early Republic, broadly defined, should read it."-Political Science Quarterly "Kathleen Bartoloni-Tuazon, in For Fear of an Elective King: George Washington and the Presidential Title Controversy of 1789, offers such an impressive analysis of high politics and political theory and sets up so effectively the social and cultural landscape within which the conversation unfolded that everyone interested in the early Republic, broadly defined, should read it." - Brian Steele, Political Science Quarterly (Spring 2016) "Bartoloni-Tuazon's well-crafted book investigates popular conceptions of the presidency. It examines the controversy surrounding John Adams's attempt to grant Washington an official title at the opening of the first session of Congress. In this, Bartoloni-Tuazonunderstands the Senate's attempt to grant the president the title 'His Highness the President of the United States of America' as a key problem of post-Revolutionary political culture and not as a frivolous diversion that distracted from the real problems of governing the new republic."-Andrew J. B. Fagal, Reviews in American History "For Fear of an Elective King is a tightly focused and impressively researched book about the controversy over what to call the president during the opening days of the first Washington administration. Kathleen Bartoloni-Tuazon has examined an extraordinary array of materials on the question of titles more generally as well as on the debate itself in its legislative and public phases."-Peter S. Onuf, Thomas Jefferson Memorial Foundation Professor, Emeritus, University of Virginia, author of The Mind of Thomas Jefferson "Kathleen Bartoloni-Tuazon demonstrates that the debate over the proper title for the nation's new national executive wasn't trivial. For Fear of an Elective King suggests a variety of ways in which the debate touched on broader questions about the fundamental nature of the new nation's new republican government."-Joanne Freeman, Yale University, author of Affairs of Honor: National Politics in the New Republic

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