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Jesse Olsavsky's The Most Absolute Abolition tells the dramatic
story of how vigilance committees organized the Underground
Railroad and revolutionized the abolitionist movement. These
groups, based primarily in northeastern cities, defended Black
neighborhoods from police and slave catchers. As the urban wing of
the Underground Railroad, they helped as many as ten thousand
refugees, building an elaborate network of like-minded sympathizers
across boundaries of nation, gender, race, and class. Olsavsky
reveals how the committees cultivated a movement of ideas animated
by a motley assortment of agitators and intellectuals, including
famous figures such as Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, and
Henry David Thoreau, who shared critical information with one
another. Formerly enslaved runaways-who grasped the economy of
slavery, developed their own political imaginations, and
communicated strategies of resistance to abolitionists-serve as the
book's central focus. The dialogues between fugitives and
abolitionists further radicalized the latter's tactics and inspired
novel forms of feminism, prison reform, and utopian constructs.
These notions transformed abolitionism into a revolutionary
movement, one at the heart of the crises that culminated in the
Civil War.
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