Bringing together the best new scholarship in the field, “The Antislavery Bulwark: The Antislavery Origins of the Civil War” points toward an important new way of thinking about the origins of the Civil War. The conference considers how the activities of antislavery Americans ultimately contributed to Southern secession and war. It places less emphasis on the radical abolitionist “vanguard” than o
n the broader antislavery movement, especially antislavery politics, stressing the common objects and premises of an often divided crusade. October 17-18 , 2014
CUNY Graduate Center
Elebash Recital Hall
365 Fifth Avenue, New York, NY
FRIDAY, OCTOBER 17
6:30pm-7:30 pm:
Conference Introduction: Chase Robinson, President, CUNY Graduate Center
Keynote Address: David Blight, Yale University
SATURDAY, OCTOBER 18
9am-9:15 am:
INTRODUCTION: James Oakes, CUNY Graduate Center
9:15 am-10:30 am:
SESSION ONE: ANTISLAVERY IN THE REVOLUTIONARY AND EARLY NATIONAL PERIODS
PRESIDING: Christopher Brown, Columbia University
This Species of Property: Slavery, Subjecthood, and the Somerset
Decision, John Blanton, CUNY Graduate Center
The Making of an Antislavery Generation: The Children of Gradual Emancipation and Early American Legal Culture, Sarah Gronningsater, McNeil Center for Early American Studies/California Institute of Technology
Rufus King and the Reading of the Higher Law during the Missouri Controversy, David Gary, Yale University
COMMENT: the Audience
10:45 am-12 pm:
SESSION TWO: ABOLITIONISM AND ANTISLAVERY POLITICS IN THE ANTEBELLUM ERA
PRESIDING: Amy Dru Stanley, University of Chicago
The Slave Power Argument and Abolitionist Partisan Politics, Corey Brooks, York College of Pennsylvania
From Framingham to Peoria: William Lloyd Garrison, Abraham Lincoln, and Antislavery Politics in 1854, Caleb McDaniel, Rice University
Absolute and Unqualified Divorce: The Origins of the Antislavery Platform, Joe Murphy, CUNY Graduate Center
COMMENT: the Audience
12-1:30 pm: BREAK FOR LUNCH
1:30-2:45 pm:
SESSION THREE: POLITICAL CRISIS OF THE 1850s
PRESIDING: Sean Wilentz, Princeton University
The Underground Railroad Reconsidered: Antebellum Politics and the Challenges of Counting Fugitive Slaves and Their Allies, Matthew Pinsker, Dickinson College
The Van and the Rear: Abolition and the Politics of Antislavery, Manisha Sinha, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Abolition, One State at a Time: Lincoln’s Crooked Path to the Thirteenth Amendment, James Oakes, CUNY Graduate Center
COMMENT: the Audience
3 pm – 4:30 pm:
PANEL DISCUSSION: IMPLICATIONS
MODERATOR: Catherine Clinton, University of Texas San Antonio
SPEAKERS:
Eric Foner, Columbia University
James McPherson, Princeton University
James Brewer Stewart, Mcalester College
COMMENT: the Audience