You have not been recognized as a subscriber to the AHR online. About 311 words from this article are provided below; about 576 words remain.
 
If you are a individual member of the American Historical Association, you may:
• login here if you have already registered for online access.
• Or if you're already logged in register your subscription.
• Set up your online account for the first time. AHA members can go to the AHA individual membership section to locate their member numbers.

If you are not a member of the American Historical Association, you can:
• Join the AHA and receive many member benefits including print and electronic issues of the American Historical Review.
• Purchase a research pass to gain two hour access to the entire History Cooperative web site. You will have full access to current issues of the American Historical Review (104.3-present). Note: the Research Pass does not provide access to JSTOR's holdings of the American Historical Review.

Instititutions can:
• Subscribe to this journal and receive print and electronic issues.
• Activate your existing subscription so that we recognize your IP number ranges.
| Book Review | The American Historical Review, 106.4 | The History Cooperative
106.4  
Journals link Search link Partners link Information link
October, 2001
 
The American Historical Review

Table of contents
List journal issues
Home
Get a printer-friendly version of this page
 
 


Book Review



Canada and the United States



Alexander Keyssar. The Right to Vote: The Contested History of Democracy in the United States. New York: BasicBooks. 2000. Pp. xxiv, 467. $30.00.

It is auspicious to work six years on a book about voting rights in the United States and publish it in 2000, when Americans came face to face with unfamiliar details about the conduct of their elections and saw the separate pieces of a process that they usually define only by its results. Alexander Keyssar had just such fortune with his monumental new study. Had he known the atmosphere into which the book would be born, perhaps he would have devoted more space to the casting and counting of ballots or anticipated how the Electoral College would focus new discussions about vote dilution. Despite the absence of such glaring relevance, Keyssar's book speaks to our recent national experience. It should be widely recommended and read for its ability to place many dilemmas of the election within a long and rocky history of voting. 1
     Keyssar explains that he wrote this book by accident: he realized, while planning something altogether different, that he could not, from existing scholarship, explain the legal framework within which workingmen did or did not engage in electoral politics. He set aside one project to embark on what he modestly calls "a chronicle" of the right to vote and "an account of the evolution of the laws . . . that defined and circumscribed the American electorate" (p. xx). But his book is more than that. It traces shifting, colliding, and sometimes contradictory understandings of this right and examines the conduct of elections as a factor in disfranchisement. Careful attention to the social context produces another story line about how responses to immigration, industrialization, war, and class conflict were expressed through laws about the right to vote. . . .


There are about 576 more words in this article. Please log in (or, if you are not yet an authorized user, please go to the User Setup page) to gain full access rights. Or if you're already logged in register your subscription.