American Dark Age

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A01=Keidrick Roy
Abolition
Abolitionists
Antebellum
Antebellum era
Antislavery
Aristocracy
Aristocracy skin
Aristocratic
Author_Keidrick Roy
Belief
Birth
Blood
Capitalism
Caste
Category=JPF
Category=NHTS
Citizens
Civil
Civil war
Claims
Clotel
Colonization
Color
Constitution
Critique
Cultural
Death
Domination
Douglass
Economic
Egalitarian
Eighteenth century
Enlightenment
Enlightenment liberal
Enslavement
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Equality
Fealty
Feudalism
forthcoming
Framework
Freedom
Harriet
Harriet jacobs
Hierarchy
Human
Human beings
Identity aware
Ideology
Ideology racial
Ideology racial feudalism
Independence
Influence
Jacobs
Jefferson
Justice
Knowledge
Language
Laws
Liberal
Liberal ideas
Liberal tradition
Liberalism
Liberty
Medieval
Metaphors
Modern
Moral
Nation
Nature
Negro
Oppression
Philosophical
Philosophy
Plantation

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691252353
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 24 Nov 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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How a group of Black liberal thinkers challenged the race-based feudalism that reigned in the early American republic

Though the United States has been heralded as a beacon of democracy, many nineteenth-century Americans viewed their nation through the prism of the Old World. What they saw was a racially stratified country that reflected not the ideals of a modern republic but rather the remnants of feudalism. American Dark Age reveals how defenders of racial hierarchy embraced America’s resemblance to medieval Europe and tells the stories of the abolitionists who exposed it as a glaring blemish on the national conscience.


Against those seeking to maintain what Frederick Douglass called an “aristocracy of the skin,” Keidrick Roy shows how a group of Black thinkers, including Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Hosea Easton, and Harriet Jacobs, challenged the medievalism in their midst—and transformed the nation’s founding liberal tradition. He demonstrates how they drew on spiritual insight, Enlightenment thought, and a homegrown political philosophy that gave expression to their experiences at the bottom of the American social order. Roy sheds new light on how Black abolitionist writers and activists worked to eradicate the pernicious ideology of racial feudalism from American liberalism and renew the country’s commitment to values such as individual liberty, social progress, and egalitarianism.

American Dark Age reveals how the antebellum Black liberal tradition holds vital lessons for us today as hate groups continue to align themselves with fantasies of a medieval past and openly call for a return of all-powerful monarchs, aristocrats, and nobles who rule by virtue of their race.

Keidrick Roy is assistant professor of government at Dartmouth College. He has received national attention through media outlets such as CBS News Sunday Morning and the Chicago Review of Books and appears in the HBO documentary Frederick Douglass: In Five Speeches. He has curated two major exhibitions at the American Writers Museum in Chicago on Black American figures, including Frederick Douglass, Ida B. Wells, and Ralph Ellison.

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