Jack Greene explores the changing definitions of America from the
time of Europe's first contact with the New World through the
establishment of the American republic. Challenging historians who
have argued that colonial American societies differed little from
those of early modern Europe, he shows that virtually all
contemporary observers emphasized the distinctiveness of the new
worlds being created in America. Rarely considering the high costs
paid by Amerindians and Africans in the construction of those
worlds, they cited the British North American colonies as evidence
that America was for free people a place of exceptional
opportunities for individual betterment and was therefore
fundamentally different from the Old World. Greene suggests that
this concept of American societies as exceptional was a central
component in their emerging identity. The success of the American
Revolution helped subordinate Americans' long-standing sense of
cultural inferiority to a more positive sense of collective self
that sharpened and intensified the concept of American
exceptionalism.