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Journal Article

Citation

McKevitt AC. New Engl. Q. 2024; 97(1): 108-111.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2024, MIT Press)

DOI

10.1162/tneq_r_01017

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

Madison's Militia: The Hidden History of the Second Amendment. By Carl T. Bogus. (New York: Oxford University Press, 2023. Pp. 336. $29.95 cloth.)

Near the end of Madison's Militia: The Hidden History of the Second Amendment, Carl Bogus directly addresses the reader: "It is a good bet that by now you have spent more time thinking about what James Madison thought about the Second Amendment than Madison, himself, spent thinking about the provision" (264). This delightful bit of self-deprecation characterizes the verve and wit of this timely book, a monograph purportedly on a narrow subject that offers insights of broad historical and contemporary applicability. Bogus argues that a close examination of the context in which Madison drafted the Second Amendment reveals the text as an offering to white southerners preoccupied with containing slave rebellion and uneasy about losing control of the primary instrument for it, the militia.

In 1998 Bogus published a formative essay on the subject, ("The Hidden History of the Second Amendment," U.C. Davis Law Review), and here he has refined and expanded that article's argument. He packs it into a readable history accessible to anyone interested in the era's political history, or in later U.S. gun politics. To his credit, Bogus leaves the latter mostly unspoken, allowing the sources to speak to the present by implication. But, as a legal scholar, he opens with a shot at his own field's "law office history"--the cherry-picking of facts and quotes to support predetermined Second Amendment arguments--and Bogus rightly draws attention to his own record of adhering instead to the methods of professional historians. Bogus's early work has often echoed in the writings of historians interested in guns and racism, most recently in Carol Anderson's The Second: Race and Guns in a Fatally Unequal America (2021).

Bogus bills Madison's Militia as a "mystery book" seeking to answer a few pointed questions. Why did Madison write the Second Amendment? And why did the first federal Congress revise it and vote to send it to the states for ratification? His answers are unmysterious. Simply: "Madison wrote the Amendment to assure his constituents in Virginia, and the South generally, that Congress could not deprive states of armed militia" (11). Over the course of ten chapters, Bogus explains why southerners needed such assurances and why Madison was inclined to offer them, even when, at the height of Federalist power in the early Congress, there was no great pressure to do so.

Like Bogus, previous historians, most notably Saul Cornell in A Well-Regulated Militia: The Founding Fathers and the Origins of Gun Control in America (2006), have downplayed claims about the Second Amendment as a statement of individual gun rights, seeing such ideas as twentieth-century inventions. They have emphasized instead the founding generation's fears of standing armies, against which citizens' militias were held up as virtuous alternatives. Bogus says that historians have exaggerated such fears, especially in the aftermath of repeated militia wartime failures. Maintaining local control of the militia as a slave patrol outweighed concerns about standing armies "by a factor of at least ten to one" (12). The hyperbole is the point: as Bogus sees it, there was no confusion among the founders that when southern politicians, like Virginia's Patrick Henry, demanded state control of the militia they did so because of the internal threat of slave uprisings. Madison acquiesced to these demands.


Language: en

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