Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 9
New York Times Unveils Project on 6 Sentences That Shaped 250 Years of American History
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 9

New York Times Unveils Project on 6 Sentences That Shaped 250 Years of American History

1 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 9

Summary

  • Six sentences are at the center of a new New York Times project tracing how language helped define the United States over 250 years.
  • The series opens with the Declaration of Independence’s 35-word assertion that “all men are created equal,” presented as the most famous of the six and a foundation for American ideas of rights and equality.
  • The introduction argues that the nation was “written into being” in 1776, framing laws, speeches, songs and literature as tools Americans use to define identity beyond power or politics.
  • A.O. Scott’s essay on the Declaration launches the project by emphasizing both the sentence’s intellectual roots and its enduring radical claim that equality and rights define human dignity.

Insights

If America was 'written into being,' can its foundational principles survive the modern weaponization of language?
When a nation’s founding language is a source of trauma for some, how can it forge a truly unified identity?