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Romantic reformers and the antislavery struggle in the Civil War Era
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ISBN: 9781139860574 9781107074590 9781107426986 9781316073834 1316073831 9781316078570 1316078574 1107074592 1107426987 1316083292 9781316083291 1316057291 9781316057292 1316054926 9781316054925 1316080935 9781316080931 1139860577 1316071472 9781316071472 1316076202 9781316076200 Year: 2014 Publisher: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press,

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Abstract

On the cusp of the American Civil War, a new generation of reformers, including Theodore Parker, Frederick Douglass, Harriet Beecher Stowe, Martin Robison Delany and Thomas Wentworth Higginson, took the lead in the antislavery struggle. Frustrated by political defeats, a more aggressive Slave Power, and the inability of early abolitionists like William Lloyd Garrison to rid the nation of slavery, the New Romantics crafted fresh, often more combative, approaches to the peculiar institution. Contrary to what many scholars have argued, however, they did not reject Romantic reform in the process. Instead, the New Romantics roamed widely through Romantic modes of thought, embracing not only the immediatism and perfectionism pioneered by Garrisonians but also new motifs and doctrines, including sentimentalism, self-culture, martial heroism, Romantic racialism, and Manifest Destiny. This book tells the story of how antebellum America's most important intellectual current, Romanticism, shaped the coming and course of the nation's bloodiest - and most revolutionary - conflict.

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