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John Quincy Adams and the Politics of Slavery - Selections from the Diary (Hardcover)
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John Quincy Adams and the Politics of Slavery - Selections from the Diary (Hardcover)
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John Quincy Adams's remarkable diary is an unusually accessible
window into the thinking of a president long before, during, and
well after his own administration. It is enormous in
scope-examining all subjects that came to Adams's interest and
stretching from the late 1780s to his death in 1848. David
Waldstreicher and Matthew Mason produce an edition of the diary
that is not only of accessible length but also focused on one
issue: the politics of slavery. Adams's long journey from
nationalist diplomacy to culture war with the southern plantocracy
is not well understood. How did the man who in 1795 told a British
cabinet officer not to speak to him of the Virginians, the Southern
people, the democrats, whom he considered in no other light than as
Americans, come to predict a grand struggle between slavery and
freedom? How could an expansionist who had left his party and lost
his U.S. Senate seat rather than attack the Jeffersonian slave
power, later come to declare the Mexican War the apoplexy of the
Constitution, a hijacking of the republic by slaveholders? What
changed? Entries in the diary touching on the politics of slavery
increased over time and reflect national events as well as Adams'
changes in attitude. The diary enables the reader to perceive and
weigh the relative importance and interaction of ideology,
politics, and personal ambition in one highly consequential life.
The editors provide a lucid introduction to the collection as a
whole and illuminate the individual documents with brief and
engaging comments, deftly placing Adams's public statements
alongside his private reflections. By juxtaposing Adams's personal
reflections on slavery with what he said-and did not say-publicly
on the issue, the editors offer a unique perspective on a topic
historians of the early republic, and especially of Jacksonian
democracy, have trouble integrating into their stories: the
complicated politics of slavery.
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