"In that sense, Lincoln was the embodiment of America's long struggle to remake itself as a morally coherent nation. Under his leadership, the Civil War finally resolved the problem of fugitive slaves by destroying the institution from which they had fled. By the time of his death, some 4 million black Americans were no longer at risk of forcible return to their erstwhile masters. They had entered the limbo between the privations of their past and the future promise of American life—a state of suspension in which millions of black Americans still live."
Andrew Delbanco at The Atlantic connects the 1850s to today.
Monday, November 12, 2018
"To Obey the Law While Respecting Themselves"
Labels:
1840s,
1850s,
Civil War,
Emerson,
legal history,
Lincoln,
political history,
race and ethnicity,
slavery
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