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A People’s History of the American Revolution
How Common People Shaped the Fight for Independence
A New Press People's History
Howard Zinn, Series Editor
hardcover
$25.95
—Howard Zinn
The first major effort to tell the history of the American Revolution from the often overlooked standpoints of its everyday participants, A People’s History of the American Revolution is a highly accessible narrative of the wartime experience that brings in the stories of previously marginalized voices: the common people, slave and free, who made up the majority in eighteenth-century America.
This first volume in The New Press People’s History Series skillfully weaves diaries, personal letters, and other long-overlooked primary source material into the historical narrative. The result is a remarkable first-person perspective on the events leading up to and during the war. With a simple shift of the focus of history’s lens—away from Revolutionary leaders such as George Washington and Thomas Jefferson and on to the slaves they owned, the Indians they displaced, and the men and boys who did the fighting—Raphael brings us a true people’s history of the Revolutionary experience.
Ray Raphael is the author of numerous books, including An Everyday History of Somewhere, Men from the Boys: Rites of Passage in Male America, and Tree Talk: The People and Politics of Timber. He lives in northern California.
Spring 2001
hardcover
6 1/8 x 9 1/4, 400 pages
978-1-56584-653-1
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