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Contesting Slavery The Politics Of Bondage And Freedom In The New American Nation John Craig Hammond

  • SKU: BELL-4982822
Contesting Slavery The Politics Of Bondage And Freedom In The New American Nation John Craig Hammond
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Contesting Slavery The Politics Of Bondage And Freedom In The New American Nation John Craig Hammond instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Virginia Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 1.64 MB
Pages: 344
Author: John Craig Hammond, Matthew Mason
ISBN: 9780813931050, 0813931053
Language: English
Year: 2011

Product desciption

Contesting Slavery The Politics Of Bondage And Freedom In The New American Nation John Craig Hammond by John Craig Hammond, Matthew Mason 9780813931050, 0813931053 instant download after payment.

Recent scholarship on slavery and politics between 1776 and 1840 has wholly revised historians’ understanding of the problem of slavery in American politics. Contesting Slavery builds on the best of that literature to reexamine the politics of slavery in revolutionary America and the early republic.

The original essays collected here analyze the Revolutionary era and the early republic on their own terms to produce fresh insights into the politics of slavery before 1840. The collection forces historians to rethink the multiple meanings of slavery and antislavery to a broad array of Americans, from free and enslaved African Americans to proslavery ideologues, from northern farmers to northern female reformers, from minor party functionaries to political luminaries such as Henry Clay.

The essays also delineate the multiple ways slavery sustained conflict and consensus in local, regional, and national politics. In the end, Contesting Slavery both establishes the abiding presence of slavery and sectionalism in American political life and challenges historians’ long-standing assumptions about the place, meaning, and significance of slavery in American politics between the Revolutionary and antebellum eras.

Contributors: Rachel Hope Cleves, University of Victoria * David F. Ericson, George Mason University * John Craig Hammond, Penn State University, New Kensington * Matthew Mason, Brigham Young University * Richard Newman, Rochester Institute of Technology * James Oakes, CUNY Graduate Center * Peter S. Onuf, University of Virginia * Robert G. Parkinson, Shepherd University * Donald J. Ratcliffe, University of Oxford * Padraig Riley, Dalhousie University * Edward B. Rugemer, Yale University * Brian Schoen, Ohio University * Andrew Shankman, Rutgers University, Camden * George William Van Cleve, University of Virginia * Eva Sheppard Wolf, San Francisco State University

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