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Rebels in Paradise
Rebels in Paradise
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A01=Bruce Laurie
abolitionist biographies
abolitionist journalism culture
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anti-nativist resistance
anti-slavery protest lineage
antislavery activism narratives
Author_Bruce Laurie
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=HBJK
Category=HBLL
Category=HBTS
Category=NHK
Category=NHTS
civic leadership legacies
community resistance movements
community-based humanitarianism
community-driven political change
COP=United States
county-level reform bastions
cross-class reform networks
Delivery_Delivery within 10-20 working days
democratic public sphere
democratic radicalism
economic modernization tensions
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
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ethical business employment
faith-driven activism
freedom seeker support networks
grassroots political reform
historic reform movements
historical friendship networks
interracial political alliances
interracial workplace advocacy
Language_English
local political alliances
local reform societies
minority rights advocacy
moral persuasion campaigning
moral reform agitation
New England abolition heritage
New England civic identity
New England political economy
nineteenth century civic culture
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political mentorship traditions
pre-Civil War politics
Price_€20 to €50
PS=Active
public prestige in politics
racial equality initiatives
racial equity friendships
radical democratic ideals
reform era newspapers
reform movements and industry
reformist intellectual culture
regional antislavery strategies
regional movement evolution
religious revival era contexts
republican political fractures
social justice coalitions
social justice pioneers
softlaunch
temperance faction disruptions
Underground Railroad hub
utopian community experiments
utopian reform experiments
western Massachusetts history
Product details
- ISBN 9781625341181
- Weight: 307g
- Dimensions: 154 x 228mm
- Publication Date: 05 Jan 2015
- Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
- Publication City/Country: US
- Product Form: Paperback
- Language: English
Long ago dubbed the “Paradise of America,” Northampton, Massachusetts, is also known as the home of visionaries—from the Reverend Jonathan Edwards, father of the First Great Awakening, to George W. Benson, brother-in-law of William Lloyd Garrison and a founder of the utopian Northampton Association for Education and Industry. During the mid-nineteenth century the town became a center of political abolitionism and a hub in the Underground Railroad. In this book, Bruce Laurie profiles five rebellious figures who launched Northampton’s abolitionist movement—Sylvester Judd Jr., John Payson Williston, David Ruggles, Henry Sherwood Gere, and Erastus Hopkins. Through their individual stories he traces the evolution of the antislavery movement in western Massachusetts and links it to broader developments in economics, civil life, and political affairs.
Northampton’s abolitionists were a heterodox group, yet most were intrepid devotees of democracy and racial equality, idealists who enjoyed genuine friendships and political alliances with African Americans. Several even took the bold step of hiring African Americans in their businesses. They avoided the doctrinal rivalries that sometimes troubled the antislavery movement in other places, skillfully steering clear of the xenophobic nativism that infected Massachusetts politics in the mid–1850s and divided the Republican Party at large. Although a prohibitionist faction disrupted the Northampton abolitionist movement for a time, the leaders prevailed on the strength of their personal prestige and political experience, making the seat of Hampshire County what one of them called an abolitionist “stronghold.”
Northampton’s abolitionists were a heterodox group, yet most were intrepid devotees of democracy and racial equality, idealists who enjoyed genuine friendships and political alliances with African Americans. Several even took the bold step of hiring African Americans in their businesses. They avoided the doctrinal rivalries that sometimes troubled the antislavery movement in other places, skillfully steering clear of the xenophobic nativism that infected Massachusetts politics in the mid–1850s and divided the Republican Party at large. Although a prohibitionist faction disrupted the Northampton abolitionist movement for a time, the leaders prevailed on the strength of their personal prestige and political experience, making the seat of Hampshire County what one of them called an abolitionist “stronghold.”
Bruce Laurie is professor of history emeritus at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and author of Beyond Garrison: Antislavery and Social Reform.
Rebels in Paradise
€31.99
