The event description says:
America’s founding documents have echoed throughout global history and culture for more than two centuries. Join us to learn more about how these two documents are related—and how they differ. Why did revolutionaries like John Adams and his peers draw on the past as they drafted the Declaration and crafted the Constitution? What ideas shaped the United States’ working definition of liberty, and how did that translate to audiences abroad? Explore how “we the people” imagined a new political vocabulary to interpret the American experiment, which we continue today.The panelists will be:
- Emily Sneff, author of When the Declaration of Independence Was News
- Mary Sarah Bilder, professor at Boston College Law School and author of Madison’s Hand
- Sara Georgini, series editor at the Adams Papers, moderator
Register from this page. Attending in person costs $10, free for M.H.S. members and Card to Culture participants. Listening in online will be free, and the society usually posts recordings of its events on YouTube a few days afterward.
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