8 Quotes & Sayings By Gordon S Wood

Gordon S. Wood is an award-winning historian whose works on the history of American democracy have been recognized by the National Book Foundation as one of the "Best Books of the Year." He is a professor of history at California State University, Fresno. His research on early American history has led him to write widely read books on topics ranging from the origins of the Revolutionary War to the presidency of Thomas Jefferson. He was awarded the Presidential Medal of Freedom by President George W Read more

Bush in 2002 for his contributions to preserving national memory and serving as an advocate for liberty.

1
In monarchies, each man's desire to do what was right in his own eyes could be restrained by beer, or force, by patronage, or by honor, and by professional standing armies. By contrast, republics had to hold themselves together from the bottom up, ultimately. Gordon S. Wood
2
Much of history is fragmentary and essentially anachronistic — condemning the past for not being more like the present. It has no real interest in the pastness of the past. Gordon S. Wood
3
Academics have given up trying to recover an honest picture of the past and have decided that their history-writing should be simply an instrument of moral hand-wringing. Gordon S. Wood
4
Americans became so thoroughly democratic that much of the period's political activity, beginning with the Constitution, was diverted to finding means and devices to tame that democracy. Gordon S. Wood
5
In the decades following the Revolution, America changed so much and so rapidly that Americans not only became used to change, but came to expected and prize it. Gordon S. Wood
6
Virtue became less the harsh and martial self-sacrifice of antiquity and more the modern willingness to get along with others for the sake of peace and prosperity. Gordon S. Wood
7
The idea of labor, of hard work, leading to increased productivity was so novel, so radical, in the overall span of Western history that most ordinary people, most of those who labored, could scarcely believe what was happening to them. Labor had been so long thought to be the natural and inevitable consequence of necessity and poverty that most people still associated it with slavery and servitude. Therefore any possibility of oppression, any threat to the colonists' hard earned prosperity, any hint of reducing them to the povery of other nations, was especially frightening; for it seemed likely to slide them back into the traditional status of servants or slaves, into the older world where labor was merely a painful necessity and not a source of prosperity. Gordon S. Wood