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Fighting for the Higher Law

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How important black abolitionists joined famous Transcendentalists to create a political philosophy to fight slaveryIn Fighting for the Higher Law, Peter Wirzbicki explores how important black abol...
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  • 26 March 2021
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How important black abolitionists joined famous Transcendentalists to create a political philosophy to fight slavery

In Fighting for the Higher Law, Peter Wirzbicki explores how important black abolitionists joined famous Transcendentalists to create a political philosophy that fired the radical struggle against American slavery.

In the cauldron of the antislavery movement, antislavery activists, such as William C. Nell, Thomas Sidney, and Charlotte Forten, and Transcendentalist intellectuals, including Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau, developed a "Higher Law" ethos, a unique set of romantic political sensibilities—marked by moral enthusiasms, democratic idealism, and a vision of the self that could judge political questions from "higher" standards of morality and reason. The Transcendentalism that emerges here is not simply the dreamy philosophy of privileged white New Englanders, but a more populist movement, one that encouraged an uncompromising form of politics among a wide range of Northerners, black as well as white, working-class as well as wealthy. Invented to fight slavery, it would influence later labor, feminist, civil rights, and environmentalist activism.

African American thinkers and activists have long engaged with American Transcendentalist ideas about "double consciousness," nonconformity, and civil disobedience. When thinkers like Martin Luther King, Jr., or W. E. B. Du Bois invoked Transcendentalist ideas, they were putting to use an intellectual movement that black radicals had participated in since the 1830s.

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Price: $79.95
Pages: 336
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: America in the Nineteenth Century
Publication Date: 26 March 2021
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780812252910
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / United States / 19th Century, History of the Americas, HISTORY / African American & Black, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Slavery
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"Fighting for the Higher Law: Black and White Transcendentalists Against Slavery, centers abolitionism in the story of American Transcendentalists. . . . The author is among a growing number of historians who have refocused the study of antislavery directly on the activism of African Americans themselves, as opposed to the “bourgeois liberalism” of white reformers. . . . Wirzbicki’s book reads as a kind of history of public philosophy in America."
Peter Wirzbicki is Assistant Professor of History at Princeton University.