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Full Description
Public debate and discussion was overshadowed by the slavery controversy during the period of the U.S. Civil War. Slavery was attacked, defended, amplified, and mitigated. This happened in the halls of Congress, the courts, the political debate, the public platform, and the lecture hall. This volume examines the issues, speakers, and venues for this controversy between 1850 and 1877. It combines exploration of the broad contours of controversy with careful analysis of specific speakers and texts.
Contents
Contents Introduction | David Zarefsky 1. A Nation "at the Edge of the Precipice": The Senate Debate over Henry Clay's 1850 Compromise Measures | Donovan Bisbee and James Jasinski 2. The Proslavery Argument of the 1850s: From Calhoun to Stephens | David F. Ericson 3. Stephen A. Douglas and the Limits of Rhetorical Containment | Robert E. Terrill 4. The Rhetoric of Salmon P. Chase: Antislavery between Principle and Politics | Michael William Pfau 5. Frederick Douglass: A Speaker on the Move | Bjørn F. Stillion Southard 6. "No Neutral Ground": Frederick Douglass and the Politics of Science | Stephen Howard Browne 7. The "Second Tier" of Abraham Lincoln's Public Discourse | David Zarefsky 8. Abraham Lincoln's Public Letters and the "Popular Heart" | Douglas L. Wilson 9. Abraham Lincoln: Second Inaugural Address | Garry Wills 10. Constructing Freedom and Equality: The Congressional Civil Rights Debates of Reconstruction | Kirt H. Wilson 11. "No Longer by Your Leave": The Impact of the Civil War and the Reconstruction Amendments on Women's Rhetoric | Karlyn Kohrs Campbell and Angela G. Ray 12. Re-constructing Reconstruction | E. Culpepper Clark Bibliography About the Authors