The spirit of the Constitution : John Marshall and the 200-year odyssey of McCulloch v. Maryland / David S. Schwartz.
2019
KF4565 .S39 2019 (Mapit)
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Author
Title
The spirit of the Constitution : John Marshall and the 200-year odyssey of McCulloch v. Maryland / David S. Schwartz.
Imprint
New York, NY : Oxford University Press, [2019]
Description
xi, 328 pages : illustrations ; 25 cm
Formatted Contents Note
Introduction: "The letter and spirit of the Constitution"
"The case now to be determined" : John Marshall and McCulloch v. Maryland in constitutional history
"The question perpetually arising" : constitutional law and politics, 1819
"Has Congress power to incorporate a bank?" : the McCulloch litigation and opinion
"As far as human prudence could insure" : Marshall's retreat from implied commerce powers
"The baneful influence of this narrow construction" : McCulloch in the age of Jackson, 1829-1860
"The various crises of human affairs" : McCulloch in the Civil War
"The government of all" : the rise and fall of Reconstruction, 1865-1883
"Acting directly on the people" : post-Civil War nationalism, 1868-1888
"The painful duty of this tribunal" : the emergence of judicial supremacy, 1884-1901
"Some choice of means" : the Lochner era and Progressivism
"Withholding the most appropriate means" : the New Deal and judicial crisis, 1932-1936
"It is a constitution we are expounding" : the triumph of implied powers, 1937-1968
"A splendid bauble" : McCulloch in the long conservative court, 1969-2018
Conclusion : "As long as our system shall exist".
"The case now to be determined" : John Marshall and McCulloch v. Maryland in constitutional history
"The question perpetually arising" : constitutional law and politics, 1819
"Has Congress power to incorporate a bank?" : the McCulloch litigation and opinion
"As far as human prudence could insure" : Marshall's retreat from implied commerce powers
"The baneful influence of this narrow construction" : McCulloch in the age of Jackson, 1829-1860
"The various crises of human affairs" : McCulloch in the Civil War
"The government of all" : the rise and fall of Reconstruction, 1865-1883
"Acting directly on the people" : post-Civil War nationalism, 1868-1888
"The painful duty of this tribunal" : the emergence of judicial supremacy, 1884-1901
"Some choice of means" : the Lochner era and Progressivism
"Withholding the most appropriate means" : the New Deal and judicial crisis, 1932-1936
"It is a constitution we are expounding" : the triumph of implied powers, 1937-1968
"A splendid bauble" : McCulloch in the long conservative court, 1969-2018
Conclusion : "As long as our system shall exist".
Summary
"2019 marks the 200th anniversary of one of the most important Supreme Court decisions in American history: McCulloch v. Maryland. The state of Maryland tried to impede the establishment of the Bank of the United States, but Chief Justice John Marshall decided that the Necessary and Proper clause of the Constitution gave the federal government implied powers that allowed it to charter the bank without hindrance. The decision expanded the power of the national government vis-à-vis the states, and it still figures centrally in contemporary debates about the scope of national legislative power. Indeed, Chief Justice Roberts' 2012 decision upholding the Affordable Care Act relied on it. In The Spirit of the Constitution, David S. Schwartz tells the story of the decision's long-term impact and the evolution of Justice Marshall's reputation. By tracing the rich history of McCulloch's influence from 1819 to the present, he shows that its meaning-and significance-for judges, political leaders, and the public varied greatly over time. The case was alternately celebrated, denounced, ignored, and reinterpreted to suit the needs of the moment. While Marshall was never reviled, he was not seen as especially influential until the late nineteenth century. Competing parties utilized McCulloch in constitutional debates over national power in the early republic; over the question of slavery in the late antebellum period; and over Congress's role in regulating the economy and civil rights in the twentieth century. Even after McCulloch's meaning seemed fixed by the mid-twentieth century, new debates about its implications have emerged in recent times. Schwartz's analysis of McCulloch's remarkable impact reaffirms the case's importance and unveils the circuitous process through which American constitutional law and ideology are made."-- Provided by publisher.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 299-309) and index.
Call Number
KF4565 .S39 2019
Language
English
ISBN
9780190699482 hardcover alkaline paper
0190699485 hardcover alkaline paper
0190699485 hardcover alkaline paper
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