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Lincoln, the South, and Slavery - The Political Dimension (Paperback)
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Lincoln, the South, and Slavery - The Political Dimension (Paperback)
Series: Walter Lynwood Fleming Lectures in Southern History
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List price R627
Loot Price R525
Discovery Miles 5 250
You Save R102 (16%)
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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Walter Lynwood Fleming Lectures in Southern History In 1858,
Abraham Lincoln declared his hatred for the institution of slavery,
likening his feelings of opposition to those of the abolitionists.
Although the fact that Lincoln always disliked slavery is
indisputable, the idea that he always opposed it with the zeal and
fervor of the abolitionists remains questionable. Only four years
prior to his bold declaration, Lincoln admittedly paid little
attention to slavery, viewing it as only a minor issue. But in the
six years preceding his presidency, his antislavery stance
underwent dramatic change. Fueled by political ambition, Lincoln's
argument against slavery and his prescription for dealing with it
moved from what he initially labeled a middle-ground stance to a
more radical position. Robert W. Johannsen's Lincoln, the South,
and Slavery traces the political dimension of Lincoln's antislavery
stance as it evolved from the passage of the Kansas-Nebraska Act in
1854 to his election as president in 1860. Whereas previous
scholars have largely ignored the political character of Lincoln's
antislavery argument, Johannsen sees Lincoln as an astute and
ambitious politician whose statements where shaped and directed by
the time's ever-changing political exigencies and considerations.
Johannsen does not demean the quality of Lincoln's sincerity or
downgrade the importance of his moral convictions on the slavery
issue, but he does suggest that politics played a larger role than
previously acknowledged in the form these convictions took. The
four chapters that compose this work connect Lincoln's position
with his attitude toward the South and Southerners, from his
initial appeal to Southerners at atime when he sought to revitalize
the dying Whig party, through his deepening involvement in the
Republican party, to his final belief that the South and Southern
interests no longer needed to be considered as factors determining
his national political success. Johannsen focuses on Lincoln's
debut in 1854 as an antislavery speaker, on the development of his
stand for the ultimate extinction of slavery, on his espression of
the doctrine of the irrepressible conflict, and finally on
Lincoln's and the South's perceptions of each other in 1860. As no
other work has done, Lincoln, the South, and Slavery shows how
Lincoln, in response to the demands of politics, became
increasingly anti-slavery and anti-Southern during the 1850s. It
will be a welcome contribution to the ongoing debate about the
enigma of Lincoln and about his role in the coming of the Civil
War.
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