James P. Young is professor emeritus of political science at Binghamton University and an independent scholar working in Ann Arbor, Michigan. He is the author of Reconsidering American Liberalism: The Troubled Odyssey Of The Liberal Idea and editor of Consensus and Conflict: Readings in American Politics.
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". . . any theorist who wants to explore commentary on Adams should start with Young."--Perspectives on Politics "This is an unusually intelligent, balanced, thoughtful study of a notoriously difficult writer and thinker. . . . An important book, possibly the best, broadest, and most original study of Henry Adams published in the past decade."--Choice "A useful, complex, and intriguing description and assessment of Henry Adams as historian and political theorist. . . . It will be necessary reading for scholars of American political thought and enjoyable reading for many others, too."--Review of Politics "A fresh look at one of America's greatest writers. Wonderfully perceptive about the whole range of Adams's work, it illuminates the patterns of his thought and the intellectual passions that drove his genius. An unusual and indispensable book."--George Kateb, author of The Inner Ocean: Individualism and Democratic Culture "A penetrating analysis of Adams's enigmatic political thought. No work on the subject does more to clarify the resistance of Adams's views to conventional 'liberal' and 'conservative' labels. Identifying the prescience as well as the bias of those views, Young discerns the abiding conflict between liberalism and civic humanism at the core of Adams's politics. A timely reassessment of Henry Adams's continued relevance."--William Merrill Decker, author of Literary Vocation of Henry Adams

