Skip to content
Our company is 100% woman-owned, adding a unique perspective to our commitment to excellence!
Our company is 100% woman-owned, adding a unique perspective to our commitment to excellence!

Frederick Douglass

Sold out
Original price $49.00 - Original price $49.00
Original price
$49.00
$49.00 - $49.00
Current price $49.00
Description
In this powerful volume, 15 leading American philosophers examine and critically reassess Douglass's significance for contemporary social and political thought.

Philosophically, Douglass's work sought to establish better ways of thinking, especially in the light of his convictions about our humanity and democratic legitimacy - convictions that were culturally and historically shaped by his experience of, and struggle against, the institution of American slavery.

Contributors include Bernard R. Boxill, Angela Y. Davis, Lewis R. Gordon, Leonard Harris, Tommy L. Lott, Howard McGary, and John P. Pittman.

List of Contributors ix

Preface xiii

Acknowledgments xv

Introduction 1

Part I: Racial Assimilation And Emigration 19

Part II: Natural Law And American's Founding Documents 83

Part III: Enlightenment And Enslavement 143

Part IV: Moral Suasion And Rebellion 205

Part V: Incarcerating And Lynching Black Bodies 311

Part VI: Douglass (1818-95): One Hundred Years Later 363

Selected Bibliography 392

Index 395

"Frederick Douglass and his writings shine as beacons of freedom and hope. Bill Lawson and Frank Kirkland have put us in their debt for commissioning - from the best minds practicing philosophy in the African-American traditions - powerful essays on the philosophical significance of Douglass's work. The book will invigorate Douglass scholarship and philosophy, and fan the embers of our love of freedom and hope." Emmanuel Eze, Bucknell University Bill E. Lawson is Professor of Philosophy at Michigan State University. His area of research is African-American Social and Political Philosophy and the theory of social contract. He has published numerous articles as well as two books, The Underclass Question, an anthology of writings by African-American philosophers on the issue of the "urban underclass", and Between Slavery and Freedom (with Howard McGary), an examination of ethical issues in the American slavery experience.

Frank M. Kirkland is Associate Professor of Philosophy at Hunter College and at the Graduate Centre, both of the City University of New York. He has published a variety of scholarly articles on Kant, Hegel, and Husserl, as well as on the urban underclass and the relation of modernity to African American life. He has also edited a collection of essays entitled Phenomenology, East and West. He is currently completing a scholarly monograph, Hegel and Husserl: Idealist Meditations.

In this powerful volume, 15 leading American philosophers examine and critically reassess Douglass's significance for contemporary social and political thought.

Philosophically, Douglass's work sought to establish better ways of thinking, especially in the light of his convictions about our humanity and democratic legitimacy - convictions that were culturally and historically shaped by his experience of, and struggle against, the institution of American slavery.

Contributors include Bernard R. Boxill, Angela Y. Davis, Lewis R. Gordon, Leonard Harris, Tommy L. Lott, Howard McGary, and John P. Pittman.


PUBLISHER:

Wiley

ISBN-13:

9780631205784

BINDING:

Paperback

BISAC:

Philosophy

LANGUAGE:

English

Request a Quote

Interested in this product? Get a personalized quote.