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Frederick Douglass

- Race and the Rebirth of American Liberalism

  • Format
  • E-bog, ePub
  • Engelsk
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Beskrivelse

For Frederick Douglass, the iconic nineteenth-century slave and abolitionist, the foundations for his arguments in support of racial equality rested on natural rights and natural law-and the bold proclamation of the Declaration of Independence that all men are created equal. But because many Americans never observed this principleand in Douglasss day even renounced ithe made it his lifes work to move the nation toward this vision of a more noble liberalism. Peter Myers now considers that effort and the natural rights arguments by which Douglass confronted race in America.Myers examines the philosophic core of Douglasss political thought, offering a greater understanding of its depth and coherence. He depicts Douglass as the leading thinker to apply the Founders doctrine of natural rights to the plight of African Americansan activist who grounded his arguments on the rights guaranteed by the Constitution and the inherent injustice not only of slavery but of any form of racial superiority.Myers first reconsiders Douglasss descriptive analysis of slavery, developing his arguments for its natural wrongness and for its natural weakness in conjunction with the right of resistance. He then examines Douglasss understandings of civil government in general and of the U.S. constitutional order in particular, exploring his argument on the Constitutions relation to slavery and his thoughts on the powers and duties of the federal and state governments in the matter of postslavery race relationsincluding new insight into Douglasss controversial do nothing doctrine.Myers argues that Douglasss political thought at its core is both more coherent and more defensible in substance than his critics acknowledge. He maintains that Douglass was right in finding the natural rights principles of the Declaration a sufficient theoretical basis for addressing the nations racial problems and contends that his hopefulness for the demise of slavery and white supremacy was marked by moderation and realism.Myers finds in Douglasss political thought the foundations of a revitalized argument for the mainstream civil rights, integrationist tradition of African American political thought. His analysis offers a new way of looking at an important thinker, as well as a compelling case for hoping that race relations in America will improve over time.

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