Talks from the Hoover Institution

The Declaration Of Independence: History, Meaning, And Modern Impact | Reimagining American Institutions

Feb 9, 2026
Jonathan Gienapp, a constitutional historian at Stanford, explains how the Declaration interlocks with the Constitution. Michael Auslin, a historian and author tracing the Declaration’s national story, discusses its cultural life. They explore the document’s origins, shifting meanings, its role in unity and civic education, and challenges teaching it in the digital age.
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INSIGHT

The Declaration's Three Lives

  • Michael Auslin found no single readable history of how Americans engaged with the Declaration over time and wrote National Treasure to fill that gap.
  • He frames the Declaration's meaning as evolving across public memory, material relic, and popular culture.
INSIGHT

Declaration And Constitution Were Once One

  • Jonathan Gienapp argues 18th-century Americans treated the Declaration and Constitution as entwined constitutional sources.
  • He shows framers like James Wilson used the Declaration to justify a singular national identity and stronger national government.
ADVICE

Teach With Originals And Reproductions

  • Use reliable primary sources (National Archives, Library of Congress) and digitized originals to teach the Declaration's tangible history.
  • Show students original handwriting, reproductions, and signer biographies to kindle interest and authenticity.
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