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Untimely Democracy The Politics Of Progress After Slavery Gregory Laski

  • SKU: BELL-34720310
Untimely Democracy The Politics Of Progress After Slavery Gregory Laski
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Untimely Democracy The Politics Of Progress After Slavery Gregory Laski instant download after payment.

Publisher: Oxford University Press, USA
File Extension: PDF
File size: 24.02 MB
Pages: 288
Author: Gregory Laski
ISBN: 9780190642792, 0190642793
Language: English
Year: 2017

Product desciption

Untimely Democracy The Politics Of Progress After Slavery Gregory Laski by Gregory Laski 9780190642792, 0190642793 instant download after payment.

From the abolition era to the Civil Rights movement to the age of Obama, the promise of perfectibility and improvement resonates in the story of American democracy. But what exactly does racial progress mean, and how do we recognize and achieve it? Untimely Democracy: The Politics of
Progress After Slavery uncovers a surprising answer to this question in the writings of American authors and activists, both black and white. Conventional narratives of democracy stretching from Thomas Jefferson's America to our own posit a purposeful break between past and present as the key to the
viability of this political form--the only way to ensure its continual development. But for Pauline E. Hopkins, Frederick Douglass, Stephen Crane, W. E. B. Du Bois, Charles W. Chesnutt, Sutton E. Griggs, Callie House, and the other figures examined in this book, the campaign to secure liberty and
equality for all citizens proceeds most potently when it refuses the precepts of progressive time. Placing these authors' post-Civil War writings into dialogue with debates about racial optimism and pessimism, tracts on progress, and accounts of ex-slave pension activism, and extending their
insights into our contemporary period, Laski recovers late-nineteenth-century literature as a vibrant site for doing political theory. Untimely Democracy ultimately shows how one of the bleakest periods in American racial history provided fertile terrain for a radical reconstruction of our most
fundamental assumptions about this political system. Offering resources for moments when the march of progress seems to stutter and even stop, this book invites us to reconsider just what democracy can make possible.

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