{"title":"The First Reconstruction: Black Politics in America from the Revolution to the Civil War by Van Gosse (review)","authors":"Aston Gonzalez","doi":"10.1353/eal.2024.a918919","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<span><span>In lieu of</span> an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:</span>\n<p> <span>Reviewed by:</span> <ul> <li><!-- html_title --> <em>The First Reconstruction: Black Politics in America from the Revolution to the Civil War</em> by Van Gosse <!-- /html_title --></li> <li> Aston Gonzalez (bio) </li> </ul> <em>The First Reconstruction: Black Politics in America from the Revolution to the Civil War</em><br/> <small>van gosse</small><br/> University of North Carolina Press, 2021<br/> 760 pp. <p>With the publication of <em>The First Reconstruction</em>, scholars now have a more comprehensive resource to study the role that free African American men in some northern states played in voting and contributing to party politics before the Civil War. Time and again, Van Gosse <strong>[End Page 181]</strong> demonstrates that electoral wins hinged on securing the ballots cast by African American men in several northern city, county, and state elections during the early Republic. Gosse provides abundant evidence that African American men voted and participated in electoral politics. He details how they recorded their own participation and also how white allies and adversaries positioned the promises and perceived perils of Black voters within changing two- and three-party systems that sometimes operated quite differently across state lines. Gosse avoids sectional generalizations and organizes the book according to the four polities of Pennsylvania, upper New England, New York, and Ohio. The contours of Black politics look different in each area, shaped as they were by preexisting laws, specific goals of political parties, diverse legal structures, and other contingent circumstances of the local populations. What comes into focus is how African American voters maneuvered strategically within and between political parties—Federalist, Whig, Democratic, Liberty, Free Soil, and Republican—in an attempt to secure improved outcomes for themselves and to try to elect politicians who supported their interests.</p> <p>In a strong narrative voice, Gosse argues that these histories of dynamic Black politics in select northern enclaves have been overlooked for several reasons. First, he stridently writes that \"we [scholars] have all been Taneyites\" (referring to Supreme Court Justice Roger Taney, who wrote the majority opinion in the 1857 <em>Dred Scott v. Sandford</em> decision) who have assumed and \"insisted that black citizenship barely, rarely, or never existed\" before taking aim at scholars' expansive understanding of \"politics\" to include African American agency beyond the ballot box. This, he argues, results in social history without the \"old-style <em>political</em> history\" (9). In response, Gosse narrows the scope of what counts as \"politics\" in order to focus on elections, voting, and political parties. The view presented in the book is exclusively male with a handful of references to Black women's presence. Second, two competing historiographical developments discussed in the book have left little room for African American men's political culture. These two camps—the Jeffersonian-Jacksonian narrative of national progress advanced by Arthur Schlesinger and Gordon Wood and later challenged by Alexander Saxton, David Roediger, and Don E. Fehrenbacher, who identified slavery, anti-Black racism, and Native abuses as foundational to the nation's development—obscured the African American <strong>[End Page 182]</strong> presence at the ballot and in the history of political parties. Gosse positions himself in neither of these camps and instead focuses on what they overlooked.</p> <p>Gosse reconstructs a rich and riveting history of Black politics largely by using traditional sources including census data, newspapers, congressional and legislative debates, and state constitutional conventions. Just one example of Gosse's nuanced interpretation of manuscript censuses explains the undercount of Black property value by Democratic census takers as a means to diminish Black Republican voter margins (448). Newspapers, however, serve as the main historical source base for the book, and Gosse's close analysis of the partisan activism contained in their pages reveals an incredibly well-documented play-by-play of electoral politics in upper New England in particular. Gosse largely measures Black men's presence in white newspapers and in later Black newspapers to determine their partisan activity when other source types do not document this. In using this methodological strategy, he also sets aside the anti-Black racism that runs through much of the early nineteenth-century white newspaper articles to access some degree of Black men's participation in party politics. Correspondence about and to Black men becomes more prominent in later chapters. With painstaking detail, Gosse describes the backroom dealings, the strategizing, and the metaphorical chess...</p> </p>","PeriodicalId":44043,"journal":{"name":"EARLY AMERICAN LITERATURE","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-02-12","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"EARLY AMERICAN LITERATURE","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1353/eal.2024.a918919","RegionNum":3,"RegionCategory":"文学","ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERATURE, AMERICAN","Score":null,"Total":0}
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Abstract
In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:
Reviewed by:
The First Reconstruction: Black Politics in America from the Revolution to the Civil War by Van Gosse
Aston Gonzalez (bio)
The First Reconstruction: Black Politics in America from the Revolution to the Civil War van gosse University of North Carolina Press, 2021 760 pp.
With the publication of The First Reconstruction, scholars now have a more comprehensive resource to study the role that free African American men in some northern states played in voting and contributing to party politics before the Civil War. Time and again, Van Gosse [End Page 181] demonstrates that electoral wins hinged on securing the ballots cast by African American men in several northern city, county, and state elections during the early Republic. Gosse provides abundant evidence that African American men voted and participated in electoral politics. He details how they recorded their own participation and also how white allies and adversaries positioned the promises and perceived perils of Black voters within changing two- and three-party systems that sometimes operated quite differently across state lines. Gosse avoids sectional generalizations and organizes the book according to the four polities of Pennsylvania, upper New England, New York, and Ohio. The contours of Black politics look different in each area, shaped as they were by preexisting laws, specific goals of political parties, diverse legal structures, and other contingent circumstances of the local populations. What comes into focus is how African American voters maneuvered strategically within and between political parties—Federalist, Whig, Democratic, Liberty, Free Soil, and Republican—in an attempt to secure improved outcomes for themselves and to try to elect politicians who supported their interests.
In a strong narrative voice, Gosse argues that these histories of dynamic Black politics in select northern enclaves have been overlooked for several reasons. First, he stridently writes that "we [scholars] have all been Taneyites" (referring to Supreme Court Justice Roger Taney, who wrote the majority opinion in the 1857 Dred Scott v. Sandford decision) who have assumed and "insisted that black citizenship barely, rarely, or never existed" before taking aim at scholars' expansive understanding of "politics" to include African American agency beyond the ballot box. This, he argues, results in social history without the "old-style political history" (9). In response, Gosse narrows the scope of what counts as "politics" in order to focus on elections, voting, and political parties. The view presented in the book is exclusively male with a handful of references to Black women's presence. Second, two competing historiographical developments discussed in the book have left little room for African American men's political culture. These two camps—the Jeffersonian-Jacksonian narrative of national progress advanced by Arthur Schlesinger and Gordon Wood and later challenged by Alexander Saxton, David Roediger, and Don E. Fehrenbacher, who identified slavery, anti-Black racism, and Native abuses as foundational to the nation's development—obscured the African American [End Page 182] presence at the ballot and in the history of political parties. Gosse positions himself in neither of these camps and instead focuses on what they overlooked.
Gosse reconstructs a rich and riveting history of Black politics largely by using traditional sources including census data, newspapers, congressional and legislative debates, and state constitutional conventions. Just one example of Gosse's nuanced interpretation of manuscript censuses explains the undercount of Black property value by Democratic census takers as a means to diminish Black Republican voter margins (448). Newspapers, however, serve as the main historical source base for the book, and Gosse's close analysis of the partisan activism contained in their pages reveals an incredibly well-documented play-by-play of electoral politics in upper New England in particular. Gosse largely measures Black men's presence in white newspapers and in later Black newspapers to determine their partisan activity when other source types do not document this. In using this methodological strategy, he also sets aside the anti-Black racism that runs through much of the early nineteenth-century white newspaper articles to access some degree of Black men's participation in party politics. Correspondence about and to Black men becomes more prominent in later chapters. With painstaking detail, Gosse describes the backroom dealings, the strategizing, and the metaphorical chess...
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者 The First Reconstruction:从革命到内战的美国黑人政治》(The First Reconstruction: Black Politics in America from the Revolution to the Civil War),作者:Van Gosse Aston Gonzalez(简历):美国从革命到南北战争时期的黑人政治》(The First Reconstruction: Black Politics in America from the Revolution to the Civil War van Gosse),北卡罗来纳大学出版社,2021 年,760 页。随着《第一次重建》的出版,学者们现在有了更全面的资源来研究南北战争前北方一些州的自由非裔美国男子在投票和政党政治中发挥的作用。范-高斯 [尾页 181]一再证明,在共和国早期的几次北方市、县和州选举中,选举获胜取决于能否获得非裔美国人的选票。高斯提供了大量非裔美国人投票和参与选举政治的证据。他详细描述了他们如何记录自己的参与情况,以及白人盟友和对手如何在不断变化的两党和三党制度中定位黑人选民的承诺和感知到的危险。高斯避免了以偏概全,而是按照宾夕法尼亚州、上新英格兰地区、纽约州和俄亥俄州这四个政体来组织全书。黑人政治的轮廓在每个地区都不尽相同,因为它们是由先前存在的法律、政党的特定目标、不同的法律结构以及当地人口的其他偶然情况所决定的。重点在于非裔美国人选民如何在各政党内部和政党之间进行战略周旋--联邦党、辉格党、民主党、自由党、自由土壤党和共和党--试图为自己争取更好的结果,并努力选出支持他们利益的政治家。高斯以铿锵有力的叙事语调指出,由于多种原因,这些在选定的北方飞地中活跃的黑人政治历史被忽视了。首先,他直言不讳地写道,"我们(学者)都是塔尼派"(指最高法院大法官罗杰-塔尼,他在 1857 年的 "德雷德-斯科特诉桑福德案 "判决中撰写了多数意见),他们假定并 "坚持认为黑人公民权几乎不存在、很少存在或从未存在过",然后他针对学者们对 "政治 "的扩展性理解,将非裔美国人的能动性纳入投票箱之外。他认为,这导致社会史没有 "旧式的政治史"(9)。作为回应,高斯缩小了 "政治 "的范围,将重点放在选举、投票和政党上。书中提出的观点完全是男性的观点,只有少数几处提到了黑人女性的存在。其次,书中讨论的两个相互竞争的史学发展为非裔美国男性的政治文化留下了很小的空间。这两大阵营--由阿瑟-施莱辛格(Arthur Schlesinger)和戈登-伍德(Gordon Wood)提出的杰斐逊-杰克逊国家进步论,以及后来受到亚历山大-萨克斯顿(Alexander Saxton)、戴维-罗迪格(David Roediger)和唐-E-费伦巴赫(Don E. Fehrenbacher)的质疑,他们认为奴隶制、反黑人种族主义和对土著人的虐待是国家发展的基础--掩盖了非裔美国人在选票和政党历史中的存在。高斯将自己定位在这两个阵营中的任何一方,而将重点放在他们所忽视的方面。高斯主要通过使用传统资料,包括人口普查数据、报纸、国会和立法辩论以及各州的制宪会议,重构了一部丰富而精彩的黑人政治史。仅举一例,高斯对人口普查手稿进行了细致入微的解读,解释了民主党人口普查员少计黑人财产价值,以此来减少黑人共和党选民的比例(448)。然而,报纸是本书的主要历史资料来源,高斯对报纸中的党派活动进行了仔细分析,揭示了上新英格兰地区令人难以置信的选举政治的详细记录。当其他资料类型没有记录黑人男子的党派活动时,高斯主要通过衡量他们在白人报纸和后来的黑人报纸上的存在来确定他们的党派活动。在使用这种方法策略时,他还撇开了贯穿于十九世纪早期白人报纸文章中的反黑人种族主义,在一定程度上了解了黑人男性参与党派政治的情况。在后面的章节中,有关黑人男性的通信和与黑人男性的通信变得更加突出。高斯以煞费苦心的细节描写了幕后交易、策略制定和隐喻棋局。