America's Founding Documents
A Critical Reader
edited by Andrew Berns, Kendall D. Deas, Woody Holton, Tamika Howard, James Risk, Madeline Steiner, Rod K. Taylor, and Jeffery S. Williams
Paperback
978-1-64336-712-5
Published: Jan 14 2027
Hardcover
978-1-64336-711-8
Published: Jan 14 2027
Ebook
978-1-64336-713-2
Published: Jan 14 2027
OA Ebook
978-1-64336-713-2
Published: Jan 14 2027
The inclusion of this book in the Open Carolina collection is made possible by the generous funding of University of South Carolina McCausland College of Arts & Sciences and University of South Carolina Libraries
An accessible framework for teaching America's founding documents
Reading America's founding documents in historical context invites students to grapple with enduring questions about liberty, power, citizenship, and constitutional government. America's Founding Documents: A Documentary Reader provides a clear, structured guide to those debates and meets the requirements of South Carolina's REACH Act.
The volume collects the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, selections from the Federalist Papers, the Emancipation Proclamation, and additional texts connected to the African American struggle for freedom. Each section includes a concise introduction that situates the documents in their historical moment and explains their continuing significance. Study questions are provided for further discussion.
Uniquely, this reader approaches the founding documents through a geographical framework, encouraging students to explore how ideas about rights and governance emerged from specific places and communities. By anchoring political thought in lived experience and lively disputes, the book moves beyond abstract theory to highlight the dynamic and contested nature of the American experiment.
Developed by scholars affiliated with the University of South Carolina's Founding Documents Initiative, this volume offers instructors a classroom-ready text for teaching America's political heritage.