In this comprehensive analysis of politics and ideology in antebellum South Carolina, Manisha Sinha offers a provocative new look at the roots of southern separatism and the causes of the Civil War. Challenging works that portray secession as a fight for white liberty, she argues instead that it was a conservative, antidemocratic movement to protect and perpetuate racial slavery. Sinha discusses some of the major sectional crises of the antebellum era–including nullification, the conflict over the expansion of slavery into western territories, and secession–and offers an important reevaluation of the movement to reopen the African slave trade in the 1850s.
Paperback: 378 Pages
Publisher: UNC Press, June 2003