" Honorable Mention, 2003 Seaborg Award for Civil War
Scholarship When Slavery Was Called Freedom uncovers the cultural
and ideological bonds linking the combatants in the Civil War era
and boldly reinterprets the intellectual foundations of secession.
John Patrick Daly dissects the evangelical defense of slavery at
the heart of the nineteenth century's sectional crisis. He brings a
new understanding to the role of religion in the Old South and the
ways in which religion was used in the Confederacy. Southern
evangelicals argued that their unique region was destined for
greatness, and their rhetoric gave expression and a degree of
coherence to the grassroots assumptions of the South. The North and
South shared assumptions about freedom, prosperity, and morality.
For a hundred years after the Civil War, politicians and historians
emphasized the South's alleged departures from national ideals.
Recent studies have concluded, however, that the South was firmly
rooted in mainstream moral, intellectual, and socio-economic
developments and sought to compete with the North in a contemporary
spirit. Daly argues that antislavery and proslavery emerged from
the same evangelical roots; both Northerners and Southerners
interpreted the Bible and Christian moral dictates in light of
individualism and free market economics. When the abolitionist's
moral critique of slavery arose after 1830, Southern evangelicals
answered the charges with the strident self-assurance of recent
converts. They went on to articulate how slavery fit into the
"genius of the American system" and how slavery was only right as
part of that system.
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