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Essay / How "Democratic" Was Jacksonian Democracy - 2046
The Rise of Democratization in America Describes the "Age of Jackson", Yet Jacksonian Democracy is a Concept Referring to the Rise of Democracy politics in America through the creation of the Democratic Party. In a way, it is a period of democracy for the common man with widespread suffrage and strict constructionism in the federal system. Another angle is that Jacksonianism can be seen as a walking contradiction to the existence of slavery and the subjugation of minorities in an era of white supremacy defying any "democratic" nature. The "Jackson Era" was an authentic movement for the common man, as Deusen identifies, combined with Chase's vision of the rise of white egalitarianism. Furthermore, its philosophy is “democratic,” with all organs and organs of government subject to the rule of the people. Yet Jackson's people didn't understand everyone; a citizen of this period would be an adult white male, specifically the rising entrepreneurial class. Revisionist historians tend to link origins much more to the profound effects of market revolutions on the socioeconomic nature of regions of the United States; compared to traditional views of a political awakening from the American Revolution to the Jeffersonian Democratic-Republicans. Yet Jacksonian democracy, in its form as most appropriately constructed by Deusen, was a "movement to secure justice and opportunity for the common man", and its ignorance of "ethnic and religious differences" and "local conditions" meant that it "reeked of demagoguery, cruelty." and corruption” (Deusen GG, 1970, pp. 7-9). "The Jackson era" is linked to the introduction of universal male suffrage, through a "powerful democratic uprising", and as Hyland argues, full "democratic" equality means "the ...... middle of the paper ......s, Inc. Deusen, GG (1970). The Rise and Decline of Jacksonian Democracy (1st ed.). New York: Van Nostand Reinhold Company. Foner, E. (2012). Give me freedom! An American History (Seagull 3rd ed.). New York: WW Norton & Company, Inc. Hyland, J. (1995). Democratic Theory: The Philosophical Foundation (1st ed.). Manchester: Manchester University Press. McCormick, R. P. (1970). Essays on Jacksonian America (1st ed., Vol. 5). (FO Gatell, ed.) Los Angeles: Holt, Rinehert and Winston, Inc. Pessen, E. (1978). Jacksonian America: Society, Personality, and Politics (revised ed.). Homewood, IL: The Dorsey Press. Remini, R. V. (1981). Andrew Jackson and the Course of American Liberty (1st ed., Vol. 2). Row: Harper and Wallace, AF (1993). The Long, Bitter Trail: Andrew Jackson and the Indians. Hill and Wang. Wilentz, S. (2012). Jacksonian democracy. History Channel.