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Machiavelli and the Modern State
The Prince, the Discourses on Livy, and the Extended Territorial Republic

This book offers a significant reinterpretation of the history of republican political thought and of Niccolò Machiavelli's place within it.

Alissa M. Ardito (Author)

9781107693708, Cambridge University Press

Paperback / softback, published 11 February 2021

339 pages, 2 maps
23 x 15 x 2 cm, 0.52 kg

'The main argument of Alissa Ardito's provocative new book pivots on drawing striking comparisons between Machiavelli's thinking and the concern that motivated the American founders - and especially James Madison - a quarter-millennium later. Plunging boldly into the rich complexity of Machiavellian scholarship, Ardito identifies a striking motif that scholarship has neglected: the way in which Machiavelli's thinking marks an important contribution to the history of the formation of aggressive nation-states in the early modern era. Ardito makes a sophisticated contribution to the never-ending challenge of interpreting Machiavelli's seminal ideas.' Jack Rakove, Stanford University

This book offers a significant reinterpretation of the history of republican political thought and of Niccolò Machiavelli's place within it. It locates Machiavelli's political thought within enduring debates about the proper size of republics. From the sixteenth century onward, as states grew larger, it was believed only monarchies could govern large territories effectively. Republicanism was a form of government relegated to urban city-states, anachronisms in the new age of the territorial state. For centuries, history and theory were in agreement: constructing an extended republic was as futile as trying to square the circle; but then James Madison devised a compound representative republic that enabled popular government to take on renewed life in the modern era. This work argues that Machiavelli had his own Madisonian impulse and deserves to be recognized as the first modern political theorist to envision the possibility of a republic with a large population extending over a broad territory.

Introduction
1. The Prince
2. The spaces of fortune
3. Necessity: the survival of the republic
4. Early modern and eighteenth-century transitions – from principality to republic and from colonies to extended republic
5. Envisioning an extended republic
Epilogue.

Subject Areas: Political science & theory [JPA], History of ideas [JFCX]

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