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Lincoln's Unfinished Work

The New Birth of Freedom from Generation to Generation

Richard Carwardine, Eric Foner, Adrienne Petty, Stephen Kantrowitz, Mark Schultz, Gavin Wright, william haller, Joshua Casmir Catalano, Randall Stephens, Briana Pocratsky, James Loewen, Lawrence McDonnell, J. William Harris, Greg Downs, Rhondda Thomas, Jerald Podair
Barcode 9780807176764
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Release Date: 18/05/2022

Genre: Law & Politics
Sub-Genre: History
Label: Louisiana State University Press
Language: English
Publisher: Louisiana State University Press
Pages: 448

The New Birth of Freedom from Generation to Generation. In his Gettysburg Address, Abraham Lincoln promised that the nation’s sacrifices during the Civil War would lead to a ‘new birth of freedom’. Lincoln’s Unfinished Work analyses how the United States has attempted to realize - or subvert - that promise over the past century and a half.

In his Gettysburg Address, Abraham Lincoln promised that the nation's sacrifices during the Civil War would lead to a "new birth of freedom." Lincoln's Unfinished Work analyzes how the United States has attempted to realize—or subvert—that promise over the past century and a half. The volume is not solely about Lincoln, or the immediate unfinished work of Reconstruction, or the broader unfinished work of America coming to terms with its tangled history of race; it investigates all three topics.

The book opens with an essay by Richard Carwardine, who explores Lincoln's distinctive sense of humor. Later in the volume, Stephen Kantrowitz examines the limitations of Lincoln's Native American policy, while James W. Loewen discusses how textbooks regularly downplay the sixteenth president's antislavery convictions. Lawrence T. McDonnell looks at the role of poor Blacks and whites in the disintegration of the Confederacy. Eric Foner provides an overview of the Constitution-shattering impact of the Civil War amendments. Essays by J. William Harris and Jerald Podair examine the fate of Lincoln's ideas about land distribution to freedpeople. Gregory P. Downs focuses on the structural limitations that Republicans faced in their efforts to control racist violence during Reconstruction. Adrienne Petty and Mark Schultz argue that Black land ownership in the post-Reconstruction South persisted at surprisingly high rates. Rhondda Robinson Thomas examines the role of convict labor in the construction of Clemson University, the site of the conference from which this book evolved. Other essays look at events in the twentieth and twenty-first centuries. Randall J. Stephens analyzes the political conservatism of white evangelical Christianity. Peter Eisenstadt uses the career of Jackie Robinson to explore the meanings of integration. Joshua Casmir Catalano and Briana Pocratsky examine the debased state of public history on the airwaves, particularly as purveyed by the History Channel. Gavin Wright rounds out the volume with a striking political and economic analysis of the collapse of the Democratic Party in the South.

Taken together, the essays in this volume offer a far-reaching, thought-provoking exploration of the unfinished work of democracy, particularly as it pertains to the legacy of slavery and white supremacy in America.