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this book has been a long time in the making (arguably too long) and I have accumulated many debts along the way. The idea for the project took shape towards the end of my doctoral studies at Northwestern University where I had the pleasure of learning from some terrific teachers. My adviser, Mary Dietz, gave me freedom when I needed it, reined me in when she had to, and read my work with the same keen eye which I had seen her cast over hundreds of manuscript submissions for Political Theory. Working under her guidance at that journal for three years provided me with an invaluable professional apprenticeship that will stand to me always. More generally, Mary’s indefatigable good humour and phenomenal work ethic, of which I remain in awe, colours all that I do professionally, even if I can scarce hope to match either. Jim Farr taught me that genuine curiosity about the past could have a home in a political science department and enabled me to turn a deaf ear to those who insinuated that any project that did not directly address contemporary questions was unworthy of pursuit. Sara Monoson’s refreshingly frank questioning still resonates whenever I find myself making fanciful claims about historical texts (which is often).
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