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ID157411
Title ProperAmerica’s original sin
Other Title Informationslavery and the legacy of white supremacy
LanguageENG
AuthorGordon-Reed, Annette
Summary / Abstract (Note)The documents most closely associated with the creation of the United States—the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution—present a problem with which Americans have been contending from the country’s beginning: how to reconcile the values espoused in those texts with the United States’ original sin of slavery, the flaw that marred the country’s creation, warped its prospects, and eventually plunged it into civil war. The Declaration of Independence had a specific purpose: to cut the ties between the American colonies and Great Britain and establish a new country that would take its place among the nations of the world. But thanks to the vaulting language of its famous preamble, the document instantly came to mean more than that. Its confident statement that “all men are created equal,” with “unalienable Rights” to “Life, Liberty, and the pursuit of Happiness,” put notions of freedom and equality at the heart of the American experiment. Yet it was written by a slave owner, Thomas Jefferson, and released into 13 colonies that all, to one degree or another, allowed slavery.
`In' analytical NoteForeign Affairs Vol. 97, No.1; Jan-Feb 2018: p.2-7
Journal SourceForeign Affairs Vol: 97 No 1
Key WordsUnited States ;  America ;  Slavery ;  White Supremacy ;  Civil War


 
 
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