Puritan Spirits in the Abolitionist Imagination by Kenyon Gradert (review)
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Date
2022-03-01
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Citation of Original Publication
Lindsay DiCuirci; Puritan Spirits in the Abolitionist Imagination. The New England Quarterly 2022; 95 (1): 97–100. doi: https://doi.org/10.1162/tneq_r_00934
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© 2022 by The New England Quarterly
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Abstract
hough every civil rights advance of previous decades was not reversed, many were. National recognition of a revived states’ rights
doctrine, manifest in “separate but equal,” would assure policies of
white supremacy for generations. By giving legitimacy to segregation in education, employment, housing, and public accommodations,
supremacist policies nearly erased the bravery, idealism, and accomplishments of the first civil rights movement that Kate Masur so
insightfully chronicles. Segregation masquerading as “separate but
equal” rights supplied legitimacy for race discrimination. After Plessy,
though new generations of activists opposed segregation in the United
States Post Office and the United States armed forces, no congress
and no president would challenge segregation until confronted by
comparison with the Nazi regime.