Wednesday, October 31, 2007

Tsesis on The Thirteenth Amendment's Revolutionary Aims

Alexander Tsesis, Loyola University of Chicago, has posted a new essay, The Thirteenth Amendment's Revolutionary Aims. It is forthcoming in his edited collection, PROMISES OF LIBERTY, Alexander Tsesis, ed. (Columbia University Press, Forthcoming). Here's the abstract:
The origins of the Thirteenth Amendment are found as much in the period of American reconstruction, when states ratified it into the Constitution, as they are in the American Revolution. During both eras Americans emphasized the human value of liberty. This chapter explores the notions of liberty that informed congressional debates on the proposed Amendment. It first reflects on revolutionary notions of liberty and then demonstrates how abolitionists relied on them. The chapter next turns to how abolitionist principles animated House and Senate debates about the proposed Thirteenth Amendment. It concludes with an explanation of why the Amendment proved to be inadequate to achieve radical Reconstruction.