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Political Antislavery Discourse and American Literature of the 1850s (Hardcover)
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Political Antislavery Discourse and American Literature of the 1850s (Hardcover)
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Appalled and paralyzed. Abandoned and betrayed. Cowed and bowed.
Thus did Frederick Douglass describe the North in the wake of the
compromise measures of 1850 that seemed to enshrine concessions to
slavery permanently into the American political system. This study
discovers in a feature of political anti-slavery discourse the
condemnation of an enfeebled North the key to a wide variety of
literary works of the 1850s. Both the political discourse and the
literature set out to expose the self-chosen degradation of
compromise as a threat at once to the personal foundation of each
individual Northerner and to the survival of the people as an actor
in history. The book fills a gap in literary criticism of the
period, which has primarily focused on abolitionist discourse when
relating anti-slavery thought to the literature of the decade.
Though it owed a debt to the abolitionists, political anti-slavery
discourse took on the more focused mission of offering a challenge
to the people. Would the North submit to the version of
self-discipline demanded by the Slave Power s Northern minions, or
would it tap the energy of the nation s founding until it embodied
defiance in its very constitution? Would the North remain a type
for the future slave empire it could not prevent, or would it
prophesy national freedom in the simple recovery of its own agency?
Literary works in both poetry and prose were well suited to making
this political challenge bear its full weight on the nation
fleshing out the critique through narrative crises that brought
home the personal stake each Northerner held in what George Julian
called an exodus from the bondage of compromise. By the end of 1860
this exodus had been completed, and that accomplishment owed much
to the massive ten year cultural project to expose the
slavery-accommodating definition of nationality as a threat to the
republican selfhood of each Northerner. Stowe, Whittier, Willis,
and Whitman, among others, devoted their literary works to this
project."
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