Gregory Ablavsky, Stanford Law School, has posted Akhil Amar's Unusable Past, which is forthcoming in the Michigan Law Review:
This essay reviews Akhil Amar's recent constitutional history of the early United States, The Words That Made Us. In this volume, Amar seeks to offer a "fresh story of America" that provides a "usable past." I argue that the book fails on both fronts. On the contrary, much of what Amar peddles is very old, ignoring generations’ worth of scholarship while parroting a centuries-old nationalist constitutional hagiography. In particular, he believes that constitutional history must be, at core, a referendum on the handful of powerful men dubbed the Founders. His effort to defend them and the Constitution from critics paints him into difficult corners, including endorsing some dubious exculpatory narratives around the exclusion of women, Black people, and Native nations in early America.--Dan Ernst
One way forward toward a more inclusive, more usable constitutional history, I argue, is in the concept of a "constitutional conversation" that Amar uses to frame his book. In Amar's hands, this conversation becomes a narrow reconstruction of debates among what he calls the "Big Six" Founders. But for a generation, historians and scholars, including many in law schools, have offered a broader vision of the constitutional conversation highlighting how non-elite people, including subordinated groups, accessed and shaped constitutional law. But the work of synthesizing these accounts in a broader constitutional history has only just begun. This work, I argue, will offer both a fuller account of the constitutional conversation and a more usable past for a nation increasingly recognizing that it has always been a diverse and fractious place.