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The Making and Breaking of the American Constitution
A Thousand-Year HistoryBy Mark PetersonNarrated by Mark PetersonLength13h 42m
About this audiobook
This audiobook narrated by Mark Peterson offers a provocative new history of America's constitution—
and issues an urgent call to action for a nation confronted by challenges its founders could never have imagined
The American Revolution occurred at a time when Britain's constitutional order failed to adapt to the extraordinary growth of its colonies. The framers designed an American constitution to succeed where Britain's had faltered, planning for continuous population and territorial expansion that would eventually cross the continent. Yet by the end of the nineteenth century, it was already ill-suited for an increasingly urban, industrialized society, and the transformations of the twentieth century have pushed it to a breaking point. This book charts the history and aims of the American constitution from its origins in an agrarian past to the grave crisis we face today.
Mark Peterson traces the American constitutional tradition to the control of land in medieval England, showing how the founders incorporated the aspirations of Magna Carta with the administrative principles of the Domesday Book, a meticulous survey and valuation of landed property commissioned by William the Conqueror. This framework encouraged the growth of democratic self-government in a young nation. It also institutionalized the colonization of territory and the expulsion of Indigenous peoples, establishing a legal blueprint for transforming tribal lands into revenue-yielding real estate for settlers. Peterson's riveting narrative paints an arresting picture of a dynamic republic whose frame of government has changed enormously to meet the challenges of the modern age but whose written constitution has changed very little.
Marking the 250th anniversary of American independence,
The Making and Breaking of the American Constitution reveals how this widening disconnect threatens the very existence of our democracy. It calls for a constitution that sustains the ideals developed over the past thousand years while meeting the challenges of the future.
Audiobook details
GenreHistory
Length13 hrs 42 mins
Narrated byMark Peterson
FormatAudiobook
Publish dateMar 10, 2026
LanguageEnglish
Table of contents
1Opening Credit
10Chapter 8 - The Machine Runs Amok - Expansion, Slavery, and Civil War
2Introduction - "Like a Garment to the Bodie"- On Constitutional Relationships
11Chapter 9 - The Machine Stalls Out - The Challenge of the Arid West
3Part I - From Domesday to Independence, 1066–1776
12Part 4 - A Domesday Book for the United States, 1890–1990
4Chapter 2 - Colonies and Constitutions from Charter to Independence
13Chapter 11 - The Great Transformation - The Making of a National Government and a National Society
5Part 2 - Making the United States, 1776–89
14Chapter 12 - The Long Crisis of the Constitution - Governmental Change and Instrumental Stasis in the Twentieth Century
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6Chapter 4 - Constitutional Solutions Before the Constitution
15Chapter 12 Continued - The Long Crisis of the Constitution - Governmental Change and Instrumental Stasis in the Twentieth Century
7Chapter 5 - From Convention to Ratification - Drafting a Blueprint for a Speculative Empire
16Epilogue - Toward 2090 - Rethinking the Purpose of the United States
8Part 3 - The Domesday Machine in Action, 1790–1890
17Acknowledgments
9Chapter 7 - The President Who Failed to Bark - Jefferson, Louisiana, and Constitutional Change
18End Credit