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esolved,
that we view with detestation every attempt to silence the FREEDOM OF
THE PRESS, by a system of terror and proscription,” so wrote the
fiery Alexander Contee Hanson about the uproar in Baltimore. A Federalist
printer in the Democratic-Republican city of Baltimore, Hanson’s
editorializing against the War of 1812 had provoked America's worst riot
to this point.
The senseless brutality of the Baltimore Riot
aimed at fellow citizens (war heroes included) challenges the traditional
narrative of an America society governed by rational debates culminating
in publicly sanctioned laws. Through Hanson's newspaper and the riot,
this site explores the nature of the public sphere and what this nature
reveals about the development of America’s broadening political
culture. |
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Current
historiography has defined the public sphere as facilitating the democratization
of politics through “rational discourses” —be it print
centered or ritual centered.
owever,
the Baltimore Riot shows the real limitations of the public sphere as
a “tool” of democratization. This website is based upon a
paper that argues for the need to balance the emphasis on rational
discourses in the Early Republic by noting the irrationality, hysteria,
and paranoia that existed and influenced the life of the young nation.
The Baltimore Riot of 1812 in response to Alexander Contee Hanson’s
Federal Repulbican reveals that though rational discourse in
print media was seeking to establish itself as a democratizing force in
society, it remained subject to the irrationality of passions, triggered
by unresolved tensions over the nature of society and government in the
young United States.
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