VOLUME I  -  DISC 1
Track Section Reader Length
1 00 - Introduction & Special Introduction Anna Simon 33:29
2 01 - Exterior Form Of North America Anna Simon 20:30
3 02:1 - Origin of the Anglo-Americans - Part 1 Founding Father 26:17
4 02:2 - Origin of the Anglo-Americans - Part 2 Founding Father 31:32
5 03 - Social Conditions Of The Anglo-Americans Anna Simon 20:58
6 04 - The Principle Of The Sovereignty Of The People In America Sibella Denton 7:08
7 05:1 - Necessity Of Examining The Condition Of The States - Part 1 Sibella Denton 31:50
8 05:2 - Necessity Of Examining The Condition Of The States - Part 2 Sibella Denton 20:06
9 05:3 - Necessity Of Examining The Condition Of The States - Part 3 Sibella Denton 32:16
10 06 - Judicial Power In The United States Anna Simon 19:46
11 07 - Political Jurisdiction In The United States Sibella Denton 13:30
12 08:1 - The Federal Constitution - Part 1 Mim Ritty 28:11
13 08:2 - The Federal Constitution - Part 2 radioreader 32:55
14 08:3 - The Federal Constitution - Part 3 Bob Tassinari 26:59
15 08:4 - The Federal Constitution - Part 4 Bob Tassinari 28:10
16 08:5 - The Federal Constitution - Part 5 Bob Tassinari 33:49
17 09 - Why The People May Strictly Be Said to Govern Gary Gilberd 3:02
18 10 - Parties in America Gary Gilberd 20:25
19 11 - Liberty of the Press in the United States Chrisitan Pecaut 32:48
20 12 - Political Associations In The United States Sibella Denton 20:04
21 13:1 - Government of the Democracy in America - Part 1 Leon Mire 34:35
22 13:2 - Government of the Democracy in America - Part 2 Leon Mire 28:53
23 13:3 - Government of the Democracy in America - Part 3 Leon Mire 28:30
24 14:1 - Advantages American Society Derives From Democracy - Part 1 Joshua B. Christensen 26:57
25 14:2 - Advantages American Society Derives From Democracy - Part 2 Joshua B. Christensen 16:23
26 15:1 - The Unlimited Power of the Majority and Its Consequences - Part 1 Founding Father 13:48
27 15:2 - The Unlimited Power of the Majority and Its Consequences - Part 2 Founding Father 32:38
28 16:1 - Causes Mitigating Tyranny In The United States - Part 1 ML Cohen 23:40
29 16:2 - Causes Mitigating Tyranny In The United States - Part 2 ML Cohen 15:40
30 17:1 - Principal Causes Maintaining the Democratic Republic - Part 3 Joe Konno 25:18
31 17:2 - Principle Causes Maintaining the Democratic Republic - Part 4 Anna Christensen 23:48
32 17:3 - Principal Causes Maintaining The Democratic Republic - Part 3 Anna Simon 28:16
33 17:4 - Principal Causes Maintaining the Democratic Republic - Part 4 Joe Konno 26:28
34 18:01 - Future Condition of Three Races in the US - Part 1 Founding Father 34:02
35 18:02 - Future Condition Of Three Races - Part 2 Founding Father 28:22
36 18:03 - Future Condition Of Three Races - Part 3 Sibella Denton 23:47
37 18:04 - Future Condition Of Three Races - Part 4 Sibella Denton 24:51
38 18:05 - Future Condition Of Three Races - Part 5 Sibella Denton 23:43
39 18:06 - Future Condition Of Three Races - Part 6 Sibella Denton 25:29
40 18:07 - Future Condition Of Three Races - Part 7 Sibella Denton 19:14
41 18:08 - Future Condition Of Three Races - Part 8 Sibella Denton 26:57
42 18:09 - Future Condition Of Three Races - Part 9 Sibella Denton 27:11
43 18:10 - Future Condition Of Three Races - Part 10 Sibella Denton 15:28
44 19 - Conclusion George Deprez PhD 16:33
45 20 - Chapter 9 - Liberty Of The Press In The United States - French original text Cicoree 24:19
VOLUME II  -  Disc 2
Track Section Reader Length
00 De Tocqueville's Preface To Vol II Sibella Denton 0:05:15
01 Part I: De Tocqueville's Preface To The Second Part
1.01: Philosophical Method Among the Americans;
1.02: Of The Principal Source Of Belief Among Democratic Nations
Leon Mire 0:23:35
02 1.03: Why The Americans Display More Readiness And More Taste For General Ideas Than Their Forefathers, The English;
1.04: Why The Americans Have Never Been So Eager As The French ForGeneral Ideas In Political Matters
Leon Mire 0:15:55
03 1.05: Of The Manner In Which Religion In The United States Avails Itself Of Democratic Tendencies;
1.06: Of The Progress Of Roman Catholicism In The United States
Anna Simon 0:24:22
04 1.07: Of The Cause Of A Leaning To Pantheism Amongst Democratic Nations;
1.08: The Principle of Equality Suggests to the Americans the Idea of the Indefinite Perfectibility of Man
Anna Simon 0:08:23
05 1.09: The Example of the Americans Does Not Prove That a Democratic People Can Have No Aptitude and No Taste for Science, Literature, or Art;
1.10: Why the Americans Are More Addicted to Practical Than to Theoretical Science
Anna Simon 0:31:22
06 1.11: The Spirit in Which the Americans Cultivate the Arts;
1.12: Why the Americans Raise Some Monuments So Insignificant, and Others So Important
Sibella Denton 0:15:33
07 1.13: Literary Characteristics of Democratic Ages;
1.14: The Trade of Literature
Sibella Denton 0:14:47
08 1.15: The Study of Greek and Latin Literature Peculiarly Useful in Democratic Communities;
1.16: The Effect of Democracy on Language
Leon Mire 0:22:12
09 1.17: Some of the Sources of Poetry among Democratic Nations;
1.18: Of the Inflated Style of American Writers and Orators
Ralph Volpi 0:27:03
10 1.19: Some Observations on the Drama amongst Democratic Nations;
1.20: Characteristics of Historians in Democratic Ages
Founding Father 0:23:16
11 1.21: Of Parliamentary Eloquence in the United States Sibella Denton 0:11:06
12 Part 2: Influence of Democracy on the Feelings of Americans
2.01: Why Democratic Nations Show a More Ardent and Enduring Love of Equality than of Liberty;
2.02: Of Individualism in Democratic Countries
Ralph Volpi 0:20:54
13 2.03: Individualism Stronger at the Close of a Democratic Revolution than at Other Periods;
2.04: That the Americans Combat the Effects of Individualism by Free Institutions
Ralph Volpi 0:17:26
14 2.05: Of the Use which the Americans Make of Public Associations in Civil Life;
2.06: Of the Relation between Public Associations and the Newspapers
Ralph Volpi 0:25:22
15 2.07: Connection of Civil and Political Associations;
2.08: The Americans Combat Individualism by the Principle of Interest Rightly Understood
Ralph Volpi 0:28:50
16 2.09: That the Americans Apply the Principle of Interest Rightly Understood to Religious Matters;
2.10: Of the Taste for Physical Well-Being in America
hearhis 0:14:19
17 2.11: Peculiar Effects of the Love of Physical Gratifications in Democratic Ages;
2.12: Causes of Fanatical Enthusiasm in Some Americans
hearhis 0:11:10
18 2.13: Causes of the Restless Spirit of Americans in the Midst of Their Prosperity;
2.14: Taste for Physical Gratifications United in America to Love of Freedom and Attention to Public Affairs
hearhis 0:21:59
19 2.15 That Religious Belief Sometimes Turns the Thoughts of the Americans to Immaterial Pleasures;
2.16: That Excessive Care of Worldly Welfare May Impair That Welfare
hearhis 0:17:54
20 2.17: That in Times Marked by Equality of Conditions and Sceptical Opinions, It Is Important to Remove to a Distance the Objects of Human Actions;
2.18: That Amongst the Americans All Honest Callings Are Honorable
Ralph Volpi 0:15:19
21 2.19: That Almost All the Americans Follow Industrial Callings;
2.20: That Aristocracy May Be Engendered by Manufactures
Anna Simon 0:18:31
22 2:21 Why Great Revolutions Will Become More Rare ,
2:22 Why Democratic Nations Are Naturally Desirous Of Peace, And Democratic Armies Of War
Anna Simon 0:16:39
23 2:23 Which Is The Most Warlike And Most Revolutionary Class In Democratic Armies?.
2:24 Chapter XXIV: Causes Which Render Democratic Armies Weaker Than Other Armies At The Outset Of A Campaign, And More Formidable In Protracted Warfare
Anna Simon 0:11:37
24 2:25 Of Discipline In Democratic Armies.
2.26 Some Considerations On War In Democratic Communities
Anna Simon 0:25:30
25 Book 3 : Influence of Democracy on Manners, Properly So Called
3.01: That Manners Are Softened as Social Conditions Become More Equal;
3.02: That Democracy Renders the Habitual Intercourse of the Americans Simple and Easy
Anna Simon 0:18:23
26 3.03: Why the Americans Show So Little Sensitiveness in Their Own Country, and Are So Sensitive in Europe;
3.04: Consequences of the Three Preceding Chapters
Anna Simon 0:13:26
27 3.05: How Democracy Affects the Relation of Masters and Servents;
3.06: That Democratic Institutions and Manners Tend to Raise Rents and Shorten the Terms of Leases
Sibella Denton 0:24:04
28 3.07: Influence of Democracy on Wager;
3.08: Influence of Democracy on Kindred
Sibella Denton 0:13:03
29 3.09: Education of Young Women in the United States;
3.10: The Young Woman in the Character of a Wife
Ransom 0:12:31
30 3.11: That the Equality of Conditions Contributes to the Maintenance of Good Morals in America;
3.12: How the Americans Understand the Equality of the Sexes
Anna Simon 0:40:32
31 3.13: That the Principle of Equality Naturally Divides the Americans into a Small Number of Private Circles;
3.14: Some Reflections on American Manners
Anna Simon 0:25:28
32 3.15: Of the Gravity of the Americans, and Why It Does Not Prevent Them from Often Committing Inconsiderate Actions;
3.16: Why the National Vanity of the Americans Is More Restless and Captious than That of the English
Anna Simon 0:50:03
33 3.17: That the Aspect of Society in the United States Is at Once Excited and Monotonous;
3.18: Of Honor in the United States and in Democratic Communities
John Lieder 0:19:23
34 3.19: Why So Many Ambitious Men and So Little Lofty Ambition Are to Be Found in the United States;
3.20: The Trade of Place-Hunting in Certain Democratic Countries
Peter Kelleher 0:19:01
35 Book 4: Influence of Democratic Opinions on Political Society
4.01: That Equality Naturally Gives Men a Taste for Free Institutions;
4.02: That the Notions of Democratic Nations on Government Are Naturally Favorable to the Concentration of Power
Sibella Denton 0:10:58
36 4.03: That the Sentiments of Democratic Nations Accord with Their Opinions in Leading Them to Concentrate on Political Power;
4.04: Of Certain Peculiar and Accidental Causes which Either Lead a People to Complete Centralization of Government, or Which Divert Them from It
Sibella Denton 0:21:09
37 4.05: That Amongst the European Nations of Our Time the Power of Governments Is Increasing, although the Persons Who Govern Are Less Stable;
4.06: What Sort of Despotism Democratic Nations Have to Fear
Sibella Denton 0:40:18
38 4.07: Continuation of the Preceding Chapters;
4.08: General Survey of the Subject
Sibella Denton

Notes
Running Times:
Volume I - 18 hours and 19 minutes
Volume II - 13 hours and 16 minutes
Total - 31 hours 35 minutes
Read by: Multiple readers
Book Coordinator:  Sibella Denton (vol. I), Karen Merine (vol. II)
Meta Coordinator: J. M. Smallheer (vol. I), Annise (vol. II)
Proof Listener: Rapunzelina (vol. II)

Artwork
Cover: Election Day in Philadelphia, also known as Election Scene. Statehouse in Philadelphia 1815 by John Lewis Krimmel.
Inset: Title page of "Democracy in America," printed by George Dearborn & Co., Adlard and Saunders, New York.
Inset: Portrait of Alexis de Tocqueville, 1850, by Theodore Chasseriau.
Label - Volume I: Election Day in Philadelphia, also known as Election Scene. Statehouse in Philadelphia 1815 by John Lewis Krimmel.
Label: Volume II: The County Election, 1846, by George Caleb Bingham.

Recordings
These recordings were made using the author’s original published work, which is in the public domain. Most of the readings were recorded by members and volunteers of Librivox.org, which has generously made the recordings available to the public domain. The audio files have been lightly edited and have been engineered using professional audio tools for maximum sonic quality. While Librivox condones the sale and distribution of these recordings, it is not associated with the management or operations of MP3 Audiobook Classics.


In 1831 Alexis de Tocqueville and Gustave de Beaumont were sent by the French government to the United States to study its prison system. They spent nine months traveling the country, using the study as a pretext to make a broad survey of the economic, political, and religious character of the young nation.  In 1835 de Tocqueville published the first of two volumes of Democracy in America, in which he examined the democratic revolution. He begins by noting the movement towards equality brought about by the ability of all men to enter the clergy, the abolition of primogeniture, and economic opportunities brought about by the growth of commerce.  The first volume dwells at length on a political analysis of why a democratic republic has succeeded in America, citing separation of church and state, respect for women, and economic mobility as critical factors. The second volume treats civil laws and society in a similar manner. The book is often cited for its insights, such as a concern for the tyranny of the majority, the dangers of individualism, the acrimony over the abolition of slavery, the emergence of the United States and Russia as the dominant world powers, and the rise of an industrial elite. The book has become a classic work at the core of the disciplines of political science, sociology, and history.  Harvard professor Harvey C. Mansfield described it as “at once the best book ever written on democracy and the best book ever written on America.”


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Item Info
EAN - DVD case 0683422134784
EAN - CD jacket 0687700169635
Media MP3 CD
Package DVD Case
Author Alexis de Tocqueville (1805-1859)
Translator Henry Reeve
Year 1835 volume 1 1840 volume 2
Recording
Read by Multiple readers
Length 31 hours and 4 minutes
Type of Reading Collaborative

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Democracy in America

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