Bind Us Apart

Bind Us Apart

by Nicholas Guyatt
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date: 25/08/2016

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The surprising and counterintuitive origins of America's racial crisis Why did the Founding Fathers fail to include blacks and Indians in their cherished proposition that "all men are created equal"? The usual answer is racism, but the reality is more complex and unsettling. In Bind Us Apart, historian Nicholas Guyatt argues that, from the Revolution through the Civil War, most white liberals believed in the unity of all human beings. But their philosophy faltered when it came to the practical work of forging a colour-blind society. Unable to convince others - and themselves - that racial mixing was viable, white reformers began instead to claim that people of colour could only thrive in separate republics: in Native states in the American West or in the West African colony of Liberia. Herein lie the origins of "separate but equal." Decades before Reconstruction, America's liberal elite was unable to imagine how people of colour could become citizens of the United States. Throughout the nineteenth century, Native Americans were pushed farther and farther westward, while four million slaves freed after the Civil War found themselves among a white population that had spent decades imagining that they would live somewhere else.

ISBN:
9780192516626
9780192516626
Category:
Ethnic minorities & multicultural studies
Format:
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date:
25-08-2016
Language:
English
Publisher:
OUP Oxford
Nicholas Guyatt

Nicholas Guyatt is a reader in American history at the University of Cambridge. The author of five books, he has written for the Guardian, Telegraph and London Review of Books and was a consultant for the acclaimed BBC Four television series, Racism- A History. He lives in Cambridge with his two daughters.

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