Fr. 44.50

Making Sense of Slavery - Americas Long Reckoning, From the Founding Era to Today

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Scott Spillman received his PhD in history from Stanford University. His writing has appeared in the New Republic, the Los Angeles Review of Books, n+1, and The Point. He lives in Denver, Colorado. Klappentext "In recent years Americans have engaged in fierce debates about how slavery and its legacies ought to be taught, researched, and narrated. But since the earliest days of the Republic, political leaders, abolitionists, judges, scholars, and ordinary citizens have all struggled to explain and understand the peculiar institution. In Making Sense of Slavery, historian Scott Spillman shows that the study of slavery was a vital catalyst for the broader development of American intellectual life and politics. In contexts ranging from the plantation fields to the university classroom, Americans interpreted slavery and its afterlives through many lenses, shaping the trajectory of disciplines from economics to sociology, from psychology to history"-- Zusammenfassung An incisive and illuminating history of the study of slavery in America, from the Revolutionary era to the 1619 Project, showing how these intellectual debates have shaped American public life

Product details

Authors Scott Spillman
Publisher Basic Books Inc.
 
Languages English
Product format Hardback
Released 04.03.2025
 
EAN 9781541602090
ISBN 978-1-5416-0209-0
No. of pages 448
Subject Humanities, art, music > History > General, dictionaries

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