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No Property In Man Slavery And Antislavery At The Nations Founding Sean Wilentz

  • SKU: BELL-57160320
No Property In Man Slavery And Antislavery At The Nations Founding Sean Wilentz
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No Property In Man Slavery And Antislavery At The Nations Founding Sean Wilentz instant download after payment.

Publisher: Harvard UP
File Extension: PDF
File size: 15.34 MB
Author: Sean Wilentz
ISBN: 9780674916036, 0674916034
Language: English
Year: 2018

Product desciption

No Property In Man Slavery And Antislavery At The Nations Founding Sean Wilentz by Sean Wilentz 9780674916036, 0674916034 instant download after payment.

Americans revere the Constitution even as they argue fiercely over its original toleration of racial slavery. Some historians have charged that slaveholders actually enshrined human bondage at the nation's founding. Sean Wilentz shares the dismay but sees the Constitution and slavery differently. Although the proslavery side won important concessions, he asserts, antislavery impulses also influenced the framers' work. Far from covering up a crime against humanity, the Constitution restricted slavery's legitimacy under the new national government. In time, that limitation would open the way for the creation of an antislavery politics that led to Southern secession, the Civil War, and Emancipation. Wilentz's controversial reconsideration upends orthodox views of the Constitution. He describes the document as a tortured paradox that abided slavery without legitimizing it. This paradox lay behind the great political battles that fractured the nation over the next seventy years. As Southern Fire-eaters invented a proslavery version of the Constitution, antislavery advocates, including Abraham Lincoln and Frederick Douglass, proclaimed an antislavery version based on the framers' refusal to validate property in man. No Property in Man invites fresh debate about the political and legal struggles over slavery that began during the Revolution and concluded with the Confederacy's defeat. It drives straight to the heart of the most contentious and enduring issue in all of American history.--
ISBN : 9780674916036

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