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Reconstructing Reconstruction - The Supreme Court and the Production of Historical Truth (Paperback)
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Reconstructing Reconstruction - The Supreme Court and the Production of Historical Truth (Paperback)
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Was slavery over when slaves gained formal emancipation? Was it
over when the social, economic, and political situation for African
Americans no longer mimicked the conditions of slavery? If the
Thirteenth Amendment abolished it in 1865, why did most of the
disputed points during the Reconstruction debates of 1866-75
concern issues of slavery? In this book Pamela Brandwein examines
the post-Civil War struggle between competing political and legal
interpretations of slavery and Reconstruction to reveal how
accepted historical truth was established.
Delving into the circumstances, assumptions, and rhetoric that
shaped the "official" story of Reconstruction, Brandwein describes
precisely how a dominant interpretation of events ultimately
emerged and what its implications have been for twentieth-century
judicial decisions, particularly for Supreme Court rulings on civil
rights. While analyzing interpretive disputes about slavery,
Brandwein offers a detailed rescoring of post-Civil War legislative
and constitutional history, including analysis of the original
understanding of the Fourteenth Amendment. She identifies the
perspectives on Reconstruction that were endorsed or rejected by
the Supreme Court. Explaining what it meant--theoretically and
practically--to resolve Reconstruction debates with a particular
definition of slavery, Brandwein recounts how the Northern
Democratic definition of "ending" slavery was not the only
definition, just the one that prevailed. Using a familiar
historical moment to do new interpretive work, she outlines a
sociology of constitutional law, showing how subjective narrative
construction can solidify into opaque institutional memory.
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