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K**R
like the work of contemporary revisionist historian Steven Hahn
A Spellbinding Odyssey For Our Troubled TimesA half-century ago, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote of the necessity for international understanding and cooperation. Using the metaphor of "The World House," in his Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community?, Dr. King observed: "In one sense the civil rights movement in the United States is a special American phenomenon which must be understood in the light of American history and dealt with in terms of the American situation."Historian and University of Connecticut professor Manisha Sinha has taken up Dr. King's challenge. She significantly expands our multidimensional awareness of the centuries long struggle with the practices of enslavement. In contrast to Dr. King's "world house," Dr. Sinha's magisterial accomplishment, The Slave's Cause: A History of Abolition (2016), suggests a mansion, every room of which exhibits facets of abolitionism, both American and foreign. In short, The Slave's Cause is an act of recovery, rescuing from obscurity a host of characters. It illuminates a variety of approaches to social activism, rebellions, resistance, rivalries, triumphs, debacles and myths, emphasizing the centrality, creativity and perseverance of African American agency in liberation efforts.By way of introduction, in the foyer of Dr. Manisha's mansion she begins to dispel some of the myths of African American abolitionism and American slavery. That the agitation was a white, mostly male, middle-class phenomenon; that immediate emancipation was an objective from the very beginning. "The sectional divisions over slavery belies generalizations of either an antislavery revolutionary generation or the equally flattering notion of a proslavery consensus among the founders," she writes. "Antislavery sentiment among the founding fathers may have been widespread, but committed abolitionists were few and far between." On the other hand, abolitionists were hardly a monolithic entity; instead, unity coexisted with factionalism, vigorous dissent and, occasionally, startling successes.The Slave's Cause delineates the roots of abolitionist fervor in the eighteenth century. We witness the pioneering works of Roger Williams, Thomas Paine, the Puritan reverends Samuel Sewall and John Eliot, "as religious revival spurred revolutionary abolition." Professor Sinha cogently identifies the foundational role of Quakers: commencing with the Philadelphia schoolteacher Anthony Benezet, "the hunchbacked, vegetarian, Quaker dwarf Benjamin Lay," the peripatetic journeyman John Woolman, the reformer Elias Hicks, the black Massachusetts sea captain Paul Cuffee and newspaper publisher Benjamin Lundy, among others.Professor Sinha lucidly demonstrates the seismic shock waves which reverberated throughout nineteenth-century America due to the Haitian Revolution, pinpointing its effects on transnational abolition efforts and countermeasures by proslavery advocates. Here she enlarges the consequential dimensions of the Haitian insurgency in the footsteps of former diplomat and author Gordon S. Brown's Toussaint's Clause: The Founding Fathers and the Haitian Revolution (2005). She explores the implications of Brown's contention that " . . . the Haitians transformed a colonial revolt into a thoroughgoing social revolution," with far-reaching aftershocks on the American body politic and in socio-economic realms.Poignant and frequently engrossing anecdotes enliven this compelling mixture of narrative and analytic passages. One of the mansion's rooms could be devoted to capsule portraits of a captivating range of historical figures, for instance: the cross-dressing slave elopers William and Ellen Craft, George Washington's change of heart kindled by the gentle criticism of poet Phillis Wheatley, the chaotic rescue of fugitive slave Shadrach Minkins and the ill-fated rescue of Anthony Burns, the strident jeremiads of pamphleteer David Walker, and the militant naturalist Henry David Thoreau. Furthermore, there's the indefatigable Cape Cod seaman Austin Bearse transporting runaways in his dory, the Moby Dick, the thoroughly anti-abolitionist Nathaniel Hawthorne, and the lexicographer Noah Webster who would argue, "'oppression is the mother of all crimes' and that "slavery had similar effects on slaves of all nations." Here, too, are the Hutchinson Family Singers, regaling and educating their nineteenth-century audiences with abolitionist hymns, stories, slogans and social commentary, forerunners of the 1960's folk trio, Peter, Paul and Mary.Forerunners of the modern twentieth-century civil rights movement abound in this comprehensive volume. An intrepid archaeologist of abolitionist ingenuity and diversity, Manisha Sinha reveals how "desegregation was most successful in Massachusetts, where the story of civil rights [was] born in the age of abolition." Among a cavalcade of vigilance committees, demonstrations, protest marches, petitions, abolition fairs and conventions, fundraisers, impassioned editorials and runaway slave narratives, the opponents of enslavement confronted and often confounded the lords of the loom, the lords of the lash and slavery's apologists. In our tour guide's estimation: "African Americans . . . remained instrumental in developing movement strategy and ideology, taking on the burden of redefining the white man's democracy." Particularly fascinating is her explication of the roots of a "transnational network of radical protest," extending far beyond an American Underground Railroad to Europe, the Caribbean, South America, Africa and Asia.Ms. Sinha's bold reinterpretation of the abolitionist odyssey, like the work of contemporary revisionist historian Steven Hahn, is singularly effective in showcasing the revolutionary impact of women in abolition, especially their formidable capacity to go beyond the boundaries of social convention and political practice. Thus, central to the crusade against enslavement is the crucial role of largely forgotten females such as the schoolteacher and choir mistress Susan Paul, the travel writer Mary Prince, orators Lydia Maria Child, Maria Stewart and the feisty firebrand Abby Kelley, as well as poet Sarah Wentworth Apthorp Morton - aroused feminine sensibilities which would prove essential to the success of the abolitionist enterprise. Even Frederick Douglass, in the professor's retelling, was moved to praise "the brilliant talents and excellent dispositions" of the women and "gave a full-throated endorsement of female quality," this seventy-two years before women were accorded the right to vote in the United States. In a sense, therefore, the current #MeToo movement adds further credence to William Faulkner's observation that "The past is never dead. It is not even past."One of the most significant insights to be gained by reading this absorbing chronicle is the flowering of social reform movements inspired by and impacted upon by abolitionism, to wit: Indian removals, women's rights, marriage, temperance and prison reform. Once more, a ripple effect becomes evident in campaigns against pseudoscientific theories of race, race inequality and racial discrimination, in emigration and colonization debates, Pan-Africanism, the quests for citizenship and educational access, the popularity of fugitive slave narratives and African American autobiographies. As a crosscurrent (or rip tide) to these social activism efforts, abolitionism sparked critiques of war, capitalism and imperialism, solidifying bonds of solidarity and discourse with the European revolutionaries of 1848, Irish peasants, British workers, communitarians, utopians, socialists and American Transcendentalists.Rigorously documented, epic in range yet finely attuned to local developments and nuances of character and motivation, The Slave's Cause is notably arresting in tracing the protracted political contest between property rights and human rights. Recent news stories about the Ivy League's complicity in "The Trade" corroborate Ms. Sinha's dissection of various unsettling antebellum American business practices still relevant to current debates on "free trade" and globalization.An indispensable, indeed vital, work for history enthusiasts, academics, educators and anyone curious about the roots of our contemporary political dysfunction, resurgent racism, populist nativism and general incivility will be richly rewarded by this work of analytical scope and depth. In contemplating the residual effects of America's "Original Sin," Manisha Sinha's scholarship invites the reader to reconsider Shakespeare's view of history: "Whereof what's past is prologue."Kevin J. AylmerSocial ScienceRoxbury Community CollegeBoston, Massachusetts7 February 2018
D**N
Yes, Slavery Was Abolished: Here's How
I recently debated a pro-war professor on the topic “Is war ever necessary?” I argued for abolishing war. And because people like to see successes before doing something, no matter how indisputably possible that thing is, I gave examples of other institutions that have been abolished in the past. One might include such practices as human sacrifice, polygamy, cannibalism, trial by ordeal, blood feuds, dueling, or the death penalty in a list of human institutions that have been largely abolished in some parts of the earth or which people have at least come to understand could be abolished.Of course, an important example is slavery. But when I claimed that slavery had been abolished, my debate opponent quickly announced that there are more slaves in the world today than there were before foolish activists imagined they were abolishing slavery. This stunning factoid was meant as a lesson to me: Do not try to improve the world. It cannot be done. In fact, it may be counter-productive.But let’s examine this claim for the 2 minutes necessary to reject it. Let’s look at it globally and then with the inevitable U.S. focus.Globally, there were about 1 billion people in the world in 1800 as the abolition movement took off. Of them, at least three-quarters or 750 million people were in slavery or serfdom of some kind. I take this figure from Adam Hochschild’s excellent Bury the Chains, but you should feel free to adjust it considerably without altering the point I’m leading up to. Today’s abolitionists claim that, with 7.3 billion people in the world, instead of there being the 5.5 billion people suffering in slavery that one might expect, there are instead 21 million (or I’ve seen claims as high as 27 or 29 million). That’s a horrific fact for each of those 21 or 29 million human beings. But does it really prove the utter futility of activism? Or is a switch from 75% of the world in bondage to 0.3% significant? If moving from 750 million to 21 million people enslaved is unsatisfactory, what are we to make of moving from 250 million to 7.3 billion human beings living in freedom?In the United States, according to the Census Bureau, there were 5.3 million people in 1800. Of them, 0.89 million were enslaved. By 1850, there were 23.2 million people in the U.S. of whom 3.2 million were enslaved, a much larger number but a noticeably smaller percentage. By 1860, there were 31.4 million people of whom 4 million were enslaved — again a higher number, but a smaller percentage. Now there are 325 million people in the United States, of whom supposedly 60,000 are enslaved (I will add 2.2 million to that figure so as to include those who are imprisoned). With 2.3 million enslaved or incarcerated in the United States out of 325 million, we are looking at a larger number than in 1800 though smaller than in 1850, and a much smaller percentage. In 1800, the United States was 16.8% enslaved. Now it is 0.7% enslaved or imprisoned.Nameless numbers should not be thought to diminish the horror for those currently suffering slavery or incarceration. But neither should they diminish the joy of those not enslaved who might have been. And those who might have been is much higher than a number calculated for one static moment in time. In 1800, those enslaved did not live long and were rapidly replaced by new victims imported from Africa. So, while we might expect, based on the state of affairs in 1800, to see 54.6 million people in the United States enslaved today, most of them on brutal plantations, we must also give consideration to the additional billions whom we would see flowing in from Africa to replace those people as they perished — had abolitionists not resisted the naysayers of their age.So, am I wrong to say that slavery has been abolished? It remains in a minimal degree, and we must do everything in our power to eliminate it completely — which is certainly doable. But slavery has largely been abolished and has certainly been abolished as a legal, licit, acceptable state of affairs, apart from mass incarceration.Is my debate opponent wrong to say that there are more people in slavery now than there used to be? Yes, in fact, he is wrong, and he is even more wrong if we choose to consider the important fact that overall populations have increased dramatically.A new book called The Slave’s Cause by Manisha Sinha is large enough to abolish various institutions if dropped on them from a significant height, but no page is wasted. This is a chronicle of the abolition movement in the United States (plus some British influences) from its origins up through the U.S. Civil War. The first thing, of many, that strikes me in reading through this valuable saga is that it was not just other nations that managed to abolish slavery without fighting bloody civil wars; it was not just the city of Washington, D.C., that figured out a different path to freedom. The U.S. North began with slavery. The North abolished slavery without a civil war.The Northern U.S. states during the first 8 decades of this country saw all the tools of nonviolence achieve the gains of abolition and of a civil rights movement that at times eerily foreshadowed the civil rights movement that would be delayed in the South until a century after the disastrous choice to go to war. With slavery ended in 1772 in England and Wales, the independent republic of Vermont partially banned slavery in 1777. Pennsylvania passed a gradual abolition in 1780 (it took until 1847). In 1783 Massachusetts freed all people from slavery and New Hampshire began a gradual abolition, as did Connecticut and Rhode Island the next year. In 1799 New York passed gradual abolition (it took until 1827). Ohio abolished slavery in 1802. New Jersey began abolition in 1804 and was not finished in 1865. In 1843 Rhode Island completed abolition. In 1845 Illinois freed the last people there from slavery, as did Pennsylvania two years later. Connecticut completed abolition in 1848.What lessons can we take from the history of the ongoing movement to abolish slavery? It was led, inspired, and driven by those suffering under and those who had escaped from slavery. A war abolition movement needs the leadership of those victimized by war. The slavery abolition movement used education, morality, nonviolent resistance, law suits, boycotts, and legislation. It built coalitions. It worked internationally. And its turn to violence (which came with the Fugitive Slave Law and led up to the Civil War) was unnecessary and damaging. The war did not end slavery. The abolitionists’ reluctance to compromise kept them independent of partisan politics, principled, and popular, but may have closed off some possible steps forward (such as through compensated emancipation). They accepted western expansion along with virtually everyone else, north and south. Compromises made in Congress drew lines between north and south that strengthened the divide.Abolitionists were not popular at first or everywhere, but were willing to risk injury or death for what was right. They challenged an “inevitable” norm with a coherent moral vision that challenged slavery, capitalism, sexism, racism, war, and all variety of injustice. They foresaw a better world, not just the current world with one change. They marked victories and moved on, just as those nations that have abolished their militaries could be used today as models for the rest. They made partial demands but painted them as steps toward full abolition. They used the arts and entertainment. They created their own media. They experimented (such as with emigration to Africa) but when their experiments failed, they never ever gave up.
L**S
Thorough analysis of the abolition movement
I had not known the depths and ubiquity of the abolition movement prior to the 19th century. In that regard, the early chapters were a revelation. This is a thorough analysis of the abolition movement, and Sinha makes clear that its effects reverberate today. She treats Lincoln and other anti-slavery but “moderate” whites fairly – they are incorporated, to a greater or lesser extent, into the general abolition movement. In particular, she acknowledges that Lincoln “achieved greatness by adopting the slave’s cause,” and “inhabited abolition ground” before his death. But above all, this book is about the African-Americans’ struggle for abolition, expansively understood, from the beginnings of American slavery to Obama. It is easy to lose track of all the unfamiliar names and acronyms, but the broad picture of the historical process emerges.
K**T
Tour de Force
This book is a comprehensive history of abolition. As such, it is difficult for me to read, not because it is not well written, which it is, but because it is so comprehensive that I have trouble reading it in long stretches. It is taking me awhile to get through the book.I can't possibly remember all the dates/names/places, but I am getting a feel for the abolition movement.
E**E
Abolition's Defining Testament
Monumental. Exhaustive. Revelatory. (I used these words before reading reviews here where many employed similar words. A consensus from readers.) Abolition now enters the pantheon of political concepts and movements assuredly because of Manisha Sinha’s singular scholarship. A germinal idea, a consistent thread in American history that has largely been ignored, MP has resurrected abolition’s body to center stage in the struggle to make America’s ideals real. Abolition became the mother of all social movements here.Remarkable that MP, a native of India, less affected, perhaps, by the inherited bias of born citizens, brings “fresh eyes,” to a vital subject, marginalized like the slaves themselves. Her labor underscores that scholarship is universal when one implements the tools of tedious, but tenacious research in birthing abolition’s being. This extraordinary work is the primer for all who would continue to bring to American consciousness abolition’s compelling narrative and its societal implications still today.Abolition, initiated by American blacks, slave and free, is the engine that set in motion a train that brought on board scores of Americans, disturbed by the cognitive dissonance of America’s ideal and practice.The work is not an easy read. Compelling surely, tedious in detailing nuances of issues and the hues of interpretations in the complexity of political issues and their ramifications, MP provides incredible scholarship of the multilayers involved in the subject of abolition. Reading, though, is richly rewarding.The role of women and their emergence into political activism by cutting their political teeth through involvement with the abolition movement segued into women suffrage activism. MP highlights the black women activists, often invisible, instrumental for abolition’s momentum and maintenance.Unfortunately, too few will read it, save scholars, serious students and a selective public. People read less, are more audio/visually inclined in acquiring information, knowledge. Yet this work demands, deserves a greater audience. Perhaps it might become a selection of The Great Courses. Perhaps Ken Burns might use it for a series on “Abolition.”An unnecessary burden on the reader was the faintness of the font; not easy on the eyes. A bolder font color would remove this totally non-reader friendly obstacle. The text is taxing enough without a challenge to one’s eyes.Manisha Sinha has a right to rest on her laurels for this Herculean task of resurrecting abolition’s defining testament.
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