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Why writer AJ Jacobs took up his quill to live like a Founding Father

For his newest project, “The Year of Living Constitutionally,” journalist A.J. Jacobs donned a tricorne hat, lugged a musket around town, and shunned electricity in favor of reading by candlelight and writing with a goose quill pen. The goal was to climb inside the heads of America’s Founding Fathers and explore the logic of basing today’s Supreme Court rulings on an originalist interpretation of the Constitution.

Mr. Jacobs practices a modern form of “stunt journalism,” in which the reporter directly participates in a story instead of merely observing it. “I like to understand things by living them,” he says. Immersion journalism, as it is also called, dates to the 1800s in the U.S.

Why We Wrote This

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Can a combination of humor and immersive experiments offer insight into both history and our own times? Author A.J. Jacobs seeks to understand the Supreme Court theory of originalism in “The Year of Living Constitutionally.”

While Mr. Jacobs didn’t invent the genre, he has put his own stamp on it.

“He uses immersive experiments not just for spectacle, but to explore deeper truths about human behavior and societal norms,” says Peter McGraw, a humor researcher and professor of marketing and psychology at the University of Colorado Boulder. “His work brings comedy and insight together, making complex topics accessible and engaging.”

The next best thing to a time machine, says A.J. Jacobs, is a wardrobe change. Dressing and acting like someone from another era subtly alters how you think and see the world, he explains: “The outer affects the inner.”

So, when Mr. Jacobs authored “The Year of Living Biblically,” a bestselling book about trying to obey every rule in the Old and New Testaments, he grew a bushy, Karl Marx-style beard (per instructions in Leviticus) and roamed the streets of New York in a flowing robe and sandals. 

Likewise, for his newest project, “The Year of Living Constitutionally,” he donned a tricorne hat, lugged a musket around town, and shunned electricity in favor of reading by candlelight and writing with a goose quill pen. The goal was to climb inside the heads of America’s Founding Fathers and explore the logic of basing today’s Supreme Court rulings on an originalist interpretation of the Constitution.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

Can a combination of humor and immersive experiments offer insight into both history and our own times? Author A.J. Jacobs seeks to understand the Supreme Court theory of originalism in “The Year of Living Constitutionally.”

Mr. Jacobs practices a modern form of “stunt journalism,” in which the reporter directly participates in a story instead of merely observing it. “I like to understand things by living them,” he says. Immersion journalism, as it is also called, dates to the 1800s in the U.S.

Although Mr. Jacobs didn’t invent the genre, he has put his own stamp on it.

“He uses immersive experiments not just for spectacle, but to explore deeper truths about human behavior and societal norms,” says Peter McGraw, a humor researcher and professor of marketing and psychology at the University of Colorado Boulder. “His work brings comedy and insight together, making complex topics accessible and engaging.” 

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