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The Underground Railroad And The Geography Of Violence In Antebellum America Robert H Churchill

  • SKU: BELL-11242674
The Underground Railroad And The Geography Of Violence In Antebellum America Robert H Churchill
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The Underground Railroad And The Geography Of Violence In Antebellum America Robert H Churchill instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cambridge University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.64 MB
Pages: 272
Author: Robert H Churchill
ISBN: 9781108733465, 1108733468
Language: English
Year: 2020

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The Underground Railroad And The Geography Of Violence In Antebellum America Robert H Churchill by Robert H Churchill 9781108733465, 1108733468 instant download after payment.

As runaway slaves fled from the South to escape bondage, slave catchers followed in their wake. The arrival of fugitives and slave catchers in the North set off violent confrontations that left participants and local residents enraged and embittered. Historian Robert H. Churchill places the Underground Railroad in the context of a geography of violence, a shifting landscape in which clashing norms of violence shaped the activities of slave catchers and the fugitives and abolitionists who defied them. Churchill maps four distinct cultures of violence: one that prevailed in the South and three more in separate regions of the North: the Borderland, the Contested Region, and the Free Soil Region. Slave catchers who followed fugitives into the North brought with them a Southern culture of violence that sanctioned white brutality as a means of enforcing racial hierarchy and upholding masculine honor, but their arrival triggered vastly different violent reactions in the three regions of the North. Underground activists adapted their operations to these distinct cultures of violence, and the cultural collisions between slave catchers and local communities transformed Northern attitudes, contributing to the collapse of the Fugitive Slave Act and the coming of the Civil War.

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