Book contents
- Born in Blood
- Born in Blood
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Introduction A System of Violence: Liberal Society in the United States
- Part I Early Manifestations
- Part II Evolutions
- 4 The 1850s: A People’s Government and the Politics of Belligerence
- 5 The United States Greets John Brown
- 6 1860: The Undisputed Election that Sparked Dispute
- 7 Emancipation’s Fury
- Part III Modern Traditions
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Index
5 - The United States Greets John Brown
from Part II - Evolutions
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 18 January 2024
- Born in Blood
- Born in Blood
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Epigraph
- Contents
- Figures
- Introduction A System of Violence: Liberal Society in the United States
- Part I Early Manifestations
- Part II Evolutions
- 4 The 1850s: A People’s Government and the Politics of Belligerence
- 5 The United States Greets John Brown
- 6 1860: The Undisputed Election that Sparked Dispute
- 7 Emancipation’s Fury
- Part III Modern Traditions
- Acknowledgements
- Notes
- Index
Summary
Chapter 5 studies the “problem of evil.” Violence is a learned behavior; peaceful interventions and de-escalation disrupt the learning cycles of violence. By 1859, Black and White abolitionists had been attempting to bring about peaceful interventions to stop slavery since the nation’s founding. But southern slaveholders were not going to give up their slave property. In the Civil War enslavers refused President Lincoln’s offer of compensated emancipation (being paid market price per slave in exchange for setting slaves free) time and again. This is the problem of evil. How does one disrupt a violent institution when, in this case, slaveholders refused peaceful means of abolishing it? John Brown understood this dynamic and he challenged the greatest enabler of slavery in the United States, the federal government. This chapter explores understandings of Black violence and Black authority (threats to the hostile differences of liberal society), the legal mechanisms used to deploy troops against slave uprisings, and interprets Brown’s interracial Virginia attack as an attempt to fashion a government that backs the enslaved over the slaveholder.
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- Born in BloodViolence and the Making of America, pp. 113 - 131Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024