by Jill Lepore

The Public Square Princeton University Press, Ruth O’Brien,  Book Series Editor

Gold Medal Winner of the 2011 Independent Publisher Book Awards in the History category


2010 Bronze Medal Winner of the 2010 ForeWord Reviews Book of the Year  Awards in the History Category


 Named a 2010 New York Times Book Review Editors’ Choice


One of the 2010 Top Debate Worthy Books of the Year, U.S. News & World Report (online version)


Highly Recommended Book, 2011 Annual Awards, Boston Authors Club


Honorable Mention for the 2010 PROSE Award for Excellence in U.S. History,

American Publishers Awards for Professional and Scholarly Excellence

Americans have always put the past to political ends. The Union laid claim to the Revolution–so did the Confederacy. Civil rights leaders said they were the true sons of liberty–so did Southern segregationists. This book tells the story of the centuries-long struggle over the meaning of the nation’s founding, including the battle waged by the Tea Party, Glenn Beck, Sarah Palin, and evangelical Christians to “take back America.”Jill Lepore, Harvard historian and New Yorker staff writer, offers a careful and concerned look at American history according to the far right, from the “rant heard round the world,” which launched the Tea Party, to the Texas School Board’s adoption of a social-studies curriculum that teaches that the United States was established as a Christian nation. Along the way, she provides rare insight into the eighteenth-century struggle for independence–a history of the Revolution, from the archives. Lepore traces the roots of the far right’s reactionary history to the bicentennial in the 1970s, when no one could agree on what story a divided nation should tell about its unruly beginnings. Behind the Tea Party’s Revolution, she argues, lies a nostalgic and even heartbreaking yearning for an imagined past–a time less troubled by ambiguity, strife, and uncertainty–a yearning for an America that never was.The Whites of Their Eyes reveals that the far right has embraced a narrative about America’s founding that is not only a fable but is also, finally, a variety of fundamentalism–anti-intellectual, antihistorical, and dangerously antipluralist.In a new afterword, Lepore addresses both the recent shift in Tea Party rhetoric from the Revolution to the Constitution and the diminished role of scholars as political commentators over the last half century of public debate.Jill Lepore is the David Woods Kemper ’41 Professor of American History at Harvard University and a staff writer at theNew Yorker. Her books include New York Burning: Liberty, Slavery, and Conspiracy in Eighteenth-Century Manhattan, a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize; and The Name of War: King Philip’s War and the Origins of American Identity, winner of the Bancroft Prize.Reviews: “Jill Lepore, a historian of the American Revolution and a staff writer at The New Yorker, has written a brief but valuable book, The Whites of Their Eyes: The Tea Party’s Revolution and the Battle Over American History, which combines her own interviews with Tea Partiers (mostly from her home state, Massachusetts) and her deep knowledge of the founders and of their view of the Constitution.”–Alan Brinkley, New York Times Book Review“Throughout her book Lepore’s implicit question remains always: Don’t these Tea Party people realize how silly they are? They don’t understand history; they need to learn that time moves forward. ‘We cannot go back to the eighteenth century,’ she says, ‘and the Founding Fathers are not, in fact, here with us today.'”–Gordon S. Wood, New York Review of Books

“For a number of years, the author has been contributing pieces to the New Yorker on American colonial history, pithy commentaries shaped by historical evidence and a storyteller’s hand. Here she braids those essays together, which makes them more satisfying and meaningful than if they were merely collected in an anthology. . . . The author is not smug in her treatment of the Tea Partiers, but she refuses to allow them to kidnap and torture history so that it is reduced to fit their fundamentalist mold. . . . Learned, lively and shrewd.”–Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

More reviews

Table of Contents:

Foreword by Ruth O’Brien ix
Prologue: Party Like It’s 1773 1
Chapter 1: Ye Olde Media 20
Chapter 2: The Book of Ages 43
Chapter 3: How to Commit Revolution 70
Chapter 4: The Past upon Its Throne 98
Chapter 5: Your Superexcellent Age 126
Epilogue: Revering America 152
Afterword to the Paperback Edition 167
Acknowledgments 177
Notes 179
Index 209

Links: Jill Lepore’s Home Page/ Jill Lepore’s New Yorker Contributor Page

Subject Areas: American History/ Political Science and International Relations