“What Shall We Do with the Negro?”
Lincoln, White Racism, and Civil War America |
| Paul D. Escott |
| 320 pages, 6 x 9 |
| 14 b&w illustrations |
| Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2786-2 $29.95 |
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Listen to a C-SPAN
interview with author Paul Escott.
Throughout the Civil War, newspaper headlines and stories repeatedly
asked some variation of the question posed by the New York Times
in 1862, “What shall we do with the negro?” The future
status of African Americans was a pressing issue for both those
in the North and in the South. Consulting a broad range of contemporary
newspapers, magazines, books, army records, government documents,
publications of citizens’ organizations, letters, diaries,
and other sources, Paul D. Escott examines the attitudes and actions
of Northerners and Southerners regarding the future of African
Americans after the end of slavery. "What Shall We Do
with the Negro?" demonstrates how historians together
with our larger national popular culture have wrenched the history
of this period from its context in order to portray key figures
as heroes or exemplars of national virtue.
Escott gives especial critical attention to Abraham Lincoln.
Since the civil rights movement, many popular books have treated
Lincoln as an icon, a mythical leader with thoroughly modern views
on all aspects of race. But, focusing on Lincoln’s policies
rather than attempting to divine Lincoln’s intentions from
his often ambiguous or cryptic statements, Escott reveals a president
who placed a higher priority on reunion than on emancipation,
who showed an enduring respect for states’ rights, who assumed
that the social status of African Americans would change very
slowly in freedom, and who offered major incentives to white Southerners
at the expense of the interests of blacks.
Escott’s approach reveals the depth of slavery’s
influence on society and the pervasiveness of assumptions of white
supremacy. "What Shall We Do with the Negro?"
serves as a corrective in offering a more realistic, more nuanced,
and less celebratory approach to understanding this crucial period
in American history.
Paul D. Escott is Reynolds Professor of
History at Wake Forest University and the author of After Secession
and Slavery Remembered, winner of the Mayflower Cup.