Appealing for Liberty: Freedom Suits in the South
Autor Loren Schweningeren Limba Engleză Hardback – 2 ian 2019
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780190664282
ISBN-10: 0190664282
Pagini: 440
Ilustrații: 14 illus.
Dimensiuni: 160 x 236 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0190664282
Pagini: 440
Ilustrații: 14 illus.
Dimensiuni: 160 x 236 x 31 mm
Greutate: 0.79 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
an important monograph that significantly advances the scholarship of slavery and the law ... Eschewing simple conclusions at every turn, Sweninger has rendered a detailed portrait of American life that deserves a wide audience of readers.
Because this book reflects brilliant scholarship, careful research, and a straightforward writing style, it merits wide readership. Anyone teaching courses in US history, sociology of law or race and ethnic relations, social problems, or related topics should incorporate this landmark report ... This unique data in the hands of a tenacious scholar opens new windows of rich understanding making this book a must read.
The book will be well received in graduate history classrooms and as an abiding resource for scholars in the field of slavery and law. Its citations are robust, even exhaustive, and future researchers will treasure its more than one hundred pages of endnotes. Schweninger has again done noble service to the field with this latest contribution.
In attempting to fathom the mysteries of the legal system as it relates to the appeals for liberty...Professor Schweninger's book moves the needle a considerable distance farther along the road to successfully confronting our own innate racism and xenophobia.
Loren Schweninger's Appealing for Liberty: Freedom Suits in the South, a painstakingly researched examination of freedom suits across the American South from the Revolutionary era into the Civil War ... Investigating a single county's or state's freedom suits over time is a tall order, and a typical synthesis of a legal phenomenon across the American South over a period of eight decades might easily lose sight of the very individuals whose lives are being examined. In Appealing for Liberty, however, we never lose sight of the men, women, and children "who wore the shoe," and as a result, as Mr. Reed suggested to his Fisk University interviewer long ago, "by and by from one to the other," Schweninger has gotten quite a book.
a remarkable book. The sheer depth of research, both in terms of time and geography, provides confidence in its conclusions ... Appealing for Liberty should be read by those interested in American slavery and the workings of the antebellum southern legal system.
a successful effort... [that] brings to great attention the complex intersection of slavery and the law
provides a detailed examination of slaves in the US South who used the courts to sue for their freedom. The work includes examples of the different kinds of approaches ... making sure slaves are viewed as the primary actors in their destiny, not just being used by white lawyers or abolitionists ... the numerous sources provided are invaluable to all scholars of slavery ... Recommended.
Appealing for Liberty unearths strands of history and experience that might seem counterintuitive at first, but that make cear this book's novel contribution to the literature.
Appealing for Liberty is an important addition to the alrady existing books on the history of slavery in the United States. It is an amazing work of legal and historical scholarship that shines a light on the little-explored African American's legal struggle for freedom and the dark corners of our history. Appealing for Liberty is a meticulously researched work of scholarship that is possibly the best book on the subject.
Overall, this is a seminal contribution to the profession, and much further work can and should be built upon this and the immense source and dataset provided by Schweninger and the RSPP.
... the entire historical profession owes Schweninger an enormous debt. His remarkable efforts to find and share the freedom suits filed by thousands of black plaintiffs held in bondage across the United States have given scholars, students, and the general public alike an unparalleled resource that can help us all better understand the history of slavery and the law in this country.
Because this book reflects brilliant scholarship, careful research, and a straightforward writing style, it merits wide readership. Anyone teaching courses in US history, sociology of law or race and ethnic relations, social problems, or related topics should incorporate this landmark report ... This unique data in the hands of a tenacious scholar opens new windows of rich understanding making this book a must read.
The book will be well received in graduate history classrooms and as an abiding resource for scholars in the field of slavery and law. Its citations are robust, even exhaustive, and future researchers will treasure its more than one hundred pages of endnotes. Schweninger has again done noble service to the field with this latest contribution.
In attempting to fathom the mysteries of the legal system as it relates to the appeals for liberty...Professor Schweninger's book moves the needle a considerable distance farther along the road to successfully confronting our own innate racism and xenophobia.
Loren Schweninger's Appealing for Liberty: Freedom Suits in the South, a painstakingly researched examination of freedom suits across the American South from the Revolutionary era into the Civil War ... Investigating a single county's or state's freedom suits over time is a tall order, and a typical synthesis of a legal phenomenon across the American South over a period of eight decades might easily lose sight of the very individuals whose lives are being examined. In Appealing for Liberty, however, we never lose sight of the men, women, and children "who wore the shoe," and as a result, as Mr. Reed suggested to his Fisk University interviewer long ago, "by and by from one to the other," Schweninger has gotten quite a book.
a remarkable book. The sheer depth of research, both in terms of time and geography, provides confidence in its conclusions ... Appealing for Liberty should be read by those interested in American slavery and the workings of the antebellum southern legal system.
a successful effort... [that] brings to great attention the complex intersection of slavery and the law
provides a detailed examination of slaves in the US South who used the courts to sue for their freedom. The work includes examples of the different kinds of approaches ... making sure slaves are viewed as the primary actors in their destiny, not just being used by white lawyers or abolitionists ... the numerous sources provided are invaluable to all scholars of slavery ... Recommended.
Appealing for Liberty unearths strands of history and experience that might seem counterintuitive at first, but that make cear this book's novel contribution to the literature.
Appealing for Liberty is an important addition to the alrady existing books on the history of slavery in the United States. It is an amazing work of legal and historical scholarship that shines a light on the little-explored African American's legal struggle for freedom and the dark corners of our history. Appealing for Liberty is a meticulously researched work of scholarship that is possibly the best book on the subject.
Overall, this is a seminal contribution to the profession, and much further work can and should be built upon this and the immense source and dataset provided by Schweninger and the RSPP.
... the entire historical profession owes Schweninger an enormous debt. His remarkable efforts to find and share the freedom suits filed by thousands of black plaintiffs held in bondage across the United States have given scholars, students, and the general public alike an unparalleled resource that can help us all better understand the history of slavery and the law in this country.
Notă biografică
Loren Schweninger is Professor Emeritus of History at the University of North Carolina, Greensboro, where he taught for forty years. He was Director of the Race and Slavery Petitions Project from 1991-2009, creating the Digital Library on American Slavery during his tenure, and is the author of numerous books, including the Lincoln-prize winning Runaway Slaves: Rebels in the Plantations (2010).