Slavery and Democracy in the New Nation
HIS 373
1252
1252
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How did the United States emerge as a revolutionary republic built on the principle of human equality at the same time that it produced the wealthiest and mightiest slave society on earth? This course approaches that question in an interpretive history emphasizing the contradictory expansion of racial slavery and political democracy. Topics include the place of slavery in the Federal Constitution and the founding the nation, the spread of the cotton kingdom, Jacksonian democracy and the growth of political parties, the rise of antislavery and proslavery politics, and the growing social and political divisions between North and South.
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Section L01
- Type: Lecture
- Section: L01
- Status: O
- Enrollment: 12
- Capacity: 20
- Class Number: 22081
- Schedule: TTh 11:00 AM-11:50 AM - Aaron Burr Hall 216
Section P01
- Type: Precept
- Section: P01
- Status: O
- Enrollment: 4
- Capacity: 12
- Class Number: 22082
- Schedule: Th 09:00 AM-09:50 AM - McCosh Hall B11
Section P02
- Type: Precept
- Section: P02
- Status: O
- Enrollment: 8
- Capacity: 12
- Class Number: 22083
- Schedule: Th 10:00 AM-10:50 AM - Dickinson Hall 210
Section P99
- Type: Precept
- Section: P99
- Status: C
- Enrollment: 0
- Capacity: 0
- Class Number: 22439