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Revolutionary Negotiations: Indians, Empires, and Diplomats in the Founding of America

Contributor(s): Sadosky, Leonard J (Author)

ISBN: 9780813955193

Publisher: University of Virginia Press

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Pub Date: January 5, 2026

Lexile Code: 0000

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.66" H x 9.00" L x 6.00" W ( 0.87 lbs) 306 pages

Series: Jeffersonian America

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description:

Revolutionary Negotiations examines early American diplomatic negotiations with both the European powers and the various American Indian nations from the 1740s through the 1820s. Sadosky interweaves previously distinct settings for American diplomacy--courts and council fires--into one singular, transatlantic system of politics.

Whether as provinces in the British Empire or as independent states, American assertions of power were directed simultaneously to the west and to the east--to Native American communities and to European empires across the Atlantic. American leaders aspired to equality with Europeans, who often dismissed them, while they were forced to concede agency to Native Americans, whom they often wished they could ignore. As Americans used diplomatic negotiation to assert their new nation's equality with the great powers of Europe and gradually defined American Indian nations as possessing a different (and lesser) kind of sovereignty, they were also forced to confront the relations between the states in their own federal union.

Acts of diplomacy thus defined the founding of America, not only by drawing borders and facilitating commerce, but also by defining and constraining sovereign power in a way that privileged some and weakened others. These negotiations truly were revolutionary.

Review Quotes:

Sadosky's achievement in this outstanding work is to cast an altogether fresh light on the early diplomacy of the United States, in which were mingled closely together the imperatives of constructing union among the thirteen states and conducting diplomacy with European and Indian nations. With equal parts attention to inner travails of the union and the diplomacy of its eastern and western borders, we gain a portrait of the relationship among these spheres that is very original and convincing.

--David Hendrickson, Colorado College, co-author of The Imperial Temptation: The New World Order and America's Purpose

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