The Politics of Slave Culture

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The Politics of Slave Culture

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The Politics of Slave Culture. Puzzles to Consider for Next Week. Why did northerners and southerners come to distrust each other? Why did southerners see the abolitionists as a serious threat to slavery? In what ways were slaves able to influence politics?. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of The Politics of Slave Culture

Page 1: The Politics of Slave Culture

The Politics of Slave Culture

Page 2: The Politics of Slave Culture

Puzzles to Consider for Next Week

Why did northerners and southerners come to distrust each other?

Why did southerners see the abolitionists as a serious threat to slavery?

In what ways were slaves able to influence politics?

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Slavery was in many respects a “negotiated” relationship between

the enslaved and their masters.

A. False: Slavery is premised on power; masters did not need to negotiate!

A. True: However great, the power of the master was never absolute.

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Slavery as a Negotiated Relationship

Ultimate threat of the planter: Violence

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Slavery as a Negotiated Relationship

Ultimate threat of the planter: Violence

Ultimate threat of the slave: Refuse to work

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Slavery as a Negotiated Relationship

Ultimate threat of the planter: Violence

Ultimate threat of the slave: Refusal to Work

Planter held advantage, but often had to make compromises

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Runaways and Revolts as Resistance

Runaways perceived as a big problem (Underground Railroad).

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Day-to-Day Resistance Sometimes Became Even More Serious

Runaways perceived as a big problem (Underground Railroad).

Slave Conspiracies and Revolts: Denmark Vesey in SC (1822) and Nat Turner in VA (1831)

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Question: Did Garrison’s Liberator encouraged Nat

Turner’s Rebellion? A. Yes, the Liberator

began publishing at same year as Turner’s rebellion.

B. No, Turner seemed unaware of the Liberator.

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Why Not More Runaways and Revolts?

Geography (Maroon Communities Difficult)

Demographics (Slaves Outnumber)

Slave Family Life

Police Power of the Government

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Another Kind of Resistance:Plantation of James Henry Hammond

Hammond: Man on the Make

Married Catherine Fitzsimmons

Philosophy: “Design for Mastery”

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Work: Slaves Converted Privileges to Rights

Hammond’s attempt to shorten Christmas holiday: I was “persuaded out of my decision by the Negroes”

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Slave Religion:Hammond Tried to Control

1840s: “I intend to break up Negro preaching. . . Ordered night meetings to be discontinued.”

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. . . Yet He Fails Miserably

1851: “Religious Troubles among the Negroes. . .they are allowed too much organization—too much power to the head men”

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Southerners Begin to Worry

Will antislavery northerners encourage runaways?

Will antislavery northerners encourage slave rebellions?

What happens if southerners lose control of the federal government?

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White Southerners Adopt Siege Mentality

Abolition Becomes a Felony in Many Southern States.

Destruction of Mail in Charleston Post Office (1835).

Gag Rule in Congress (1836).Slavery as a Positive Good

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Southern Behavior Elicited Some Distrust in North

John Quincy Adams:

“The South Carolinians are attempting to govern the Union as they govern their slaves.”

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Adding to the Cycle of Distrust

NorthernAbolitionism

Slave Resistance

SouthernCensorship

Northern

Suspicion

ProslaveryIdeology

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The “Before Picture”Thomas Jefferson’s

Ambivalence Slaveholder who

recognized contradictions

Slavery might undermine republic

Slavery would eventually disappear

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But Jefferson Did Relatively Little to Abolish Slavery

“We have the wolf by the ears; and we can neither hold him, nor safely let him go. Justice is in one scale, and self-preservation in the other.”

Thomas Jefferson, 1820

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Elements of Proslavery Ideology

Religion: Bible Justified Slavery, Africans Introduced to Christianity

Economics: Northerners Benefit from Slavery as Well.

Care of Slaves: Planters Have Economic Incentive to Treat Slaves Well.

Racism