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Slavery and the Democratic Conscience

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Democracy and slavery collided in the early American republic, nowhere more so than in the Democratic-Republican party, the political coalition that elected Thomas Jefferson president in 1800 and g...
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  • 13 November 2015
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Democracy and slavery collided in the early American republic, nowhere more so than in the Democratic-Republican party, the political coalition that elected Thomas Jefferson president in 1800 and governed the United States into the 1820s. Joining southern slaveholders and northern advocates of democracy, the coalition facilitated a dramatic expansion of American slavery and generated ideological conflict over slaveholder power in national politics. Slavery was not an exception to the rise of American democracy, Padraig Riley argues, but was instead central to the formation of democratic institutions and ideals.

Slavery and the Democratic Conscience explains how northern men both confronted and accommodated slavery as they joined the Democratic-Republican cause. Although many northern Jeffersonians opposed slavery, they helped build a complex political movement that defended the rights of white men to self-government, American citizenship, and equality and protected the master's right to enslave. Dissenters challenged this consensus, but they faced significant obstacles. Slaveholders resisted interference with slavery, while committed Jeffersonians built an aggressive American nationalism, consolidating an ideological accord between white freedom and slaveholder power.

By the onset of the Missouri Crisis in 1819, democracy itself had become an obstacle to antislavery politics, insofar as it bound together northern aspirations for freedom and the institutional power of slavery. That fundamental compromise had a deep influence on democratic political culture in the United States for decades to come.

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Price: $55.00
Pages: 328
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press, Inc.
Imprint: University of Pennsylvania Press
Series: Early American Studies
Publication Date: 13 November 2015
ISBN: 9780812291704
Format: eBook
BISACs: HISTORY / United States / Revolutionary Period (1775-1800), History of the Americas, POLITICAL SCIENCE / American Government / General
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"Drawing on an impressive archive that includes newspapers of the period, political pamphlets, and congressional records, Riley uncovers a previously untold story within the master narrative of early US politics. rough its nuanced account of the origins of Jeffersonian Republicanism, Slavery and the Democratic Conscience reveals what might be e aced if we focus solely on that movement's namesake: the deep but deeply fraught links between white notions of liberty and the material realities of slavery in the early United States."
Padraig Riley teaches history and humanities at Reed College.

Introduction. North of Jefferson
Chapter 1. The Emancipation of New England
Chapter 2. Philadelphia, Crossroads of Democracy
Chapter 3. Jeffersonians Go to Washington
Chapter 4. The Idea of a Northern Party
Chapter 5. Republican Nation: The War of 1812
Chapter 6. Democracy in Crisis
Conclusion. Democracy, Race, Nation

List of Abbreviations
Notes
Index
Acknowledgments