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Hardcover North of Slavery: The Negro in the Free States, 1790-1860 Book

ISBN: 0226485854

ISBN13: 9780226485850

North of Slavery: The Negro in the Free States, 1790-1860

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

". . . no American can be pleased with the treatment of Negro Americans, North and South, in the years before the Civil War. In his clear, lucid account of the Northern phase of the story Professor... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A Must - Read History of America

This book is a remarkably readable and documented narrative on slavery in the North. As one learns US history in school as a child, one is led to believe in the evil of the south and the abolitionist good of the north. This book will shed much needed light on the role that slavery played in the north. It will demystify preconceived ideas of the past, and provide valuable insight on the enduring character of the northern states in the present. We had borrowed and read this book before, and it was so good we had to get it again.

Solid, comprehensive coverage of an important subject

This book deals with the treatment of American blacks in the northern states in the period prior to the Civil War. It is a very important subject, and Litwack gives it a masterly treatment. The book is very focused, very clearly written and covers the whole field. Although it was written back in the 1960s, as far as I can tell, it is still the best book available on this subject. The message of the book, incidently, is that blacks were not treated well in the north during this period. They were freed, in most of the North, early in this period, but they were systematically denied political, social and economic rights. Most of what we know as Southern Jim Crow laws in the post Civil War period existed in the North prior to the Civil War. There were some glimmers of hope and progress, especially in New England, but by and large the picture is pretty grim.

Dated but still relevant and a good read

Published in 1961, time and events have aged Litwak's rhetoric somewhat, but his approach to antebellum racial matters is still historically valid and highly readable. It is a must for Civil War students, although you should balance it with other views. (P. J. Staudenraus's The African Colonization Movement puts a slightly different hue to that 19th century movement, inane though such thinking seems today.) I am bothered, however, by Litwak's approach because I am always bothered by activists who allow their personal views to creep into their work. (I also know how tough it can be to prevent it from happening.) UC Berkley trained and still teaching there today, Litwak could hardly epitomize even a moderate approach, much less conservatism. Interviews and stories about him show that even today his classes retain a '60s radical flavor (although this book predates all that.) Nonetheless, he is a good historian who has his facts straight if not always balanced. He does attempt on occasion to be fair and balanced, as when he points out that Frederick Douglass was as prejudiced toward Irish and Catholics (the former inevitably implying the latter) as whites were to him. A book of this nature tends to ring a negative tone by its nature. It always risks unfairly criticizing white men for holding attitudes of a bygone era. His book-closing, one-sided critique of Abraham Lincoln, while not offering one untrue statement, can be and often has been debated. Whatever you may think, read this book.

Still Important, Still Unsettling

No one could take pleasure from reading the disgraceful statistics of racism in America, but sometimes one must read unpleasant truths. Honest recognition of our national guilt is, I think, a necessary preliminary to becoming the beacon to the world that we proclaim ourselves to be. I read this book decades ago in college, and again this week. It's still a classic, a starting point for more recent studies in African-American history.

A seminal, path-breaking book

North of Slavery marked the first comprehensive scholarly effort to explore the meaning of race in the northern states before the Civil War. It many ways, it remains -- almost forty years after its publication -- the single best starting point for examining the lives of Northern free blacks. It focuses on a region traditionally neglected by other studies of race relations, a problem being rectified in the scholarship only now. Challenging the myth of the North as a bastion of racial liberalism, Litwack portrays a North beset by segregation, racial pogrom, legal stricture, and -- above all -- a system of informal proscription which rendered black people there anything but "free." Written during the early stages of the Civil Rights Movement, the book had a chilling and prophetic understanding of the struggles which would confront the CRM as it moved out of the South and into the nation. North of Slavery was, and still is, a stunning antidote to the attitudes of those who tell themselves "it doesn't happen here." As is his style, Litwack peppers his history liberally with compelling first-hand accounts; the writing is exceptional: clean, hard-hitting, dark, compelling, and courageous.
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