Natural Rights (Re)Construction: Frederick Douglass and Constitutional Abolitionism
This dissertation examines Douglass’s constitutional thought and his role in constitutional abolitionism during the antebellum period and early Reconstruction. Douglass’s constitutional thought uniquely answered the question: What was the Constitution’s posture toward slavery? While some abolitionists simply accepted slavery as an indelible blemish on the Constitution, Douglass sought to redeem the Constitution from the evil of slavery. Indeed, Douglass helped constitutional abolitionists popularize a natural rights theory of interpretation that excised slavery from the Constitution. But Douglass employed a broader natural rights construction of the Constitution than the one favored by more reserved abolitionists who sought to preserve federalism. Douglass, through his natural rights theory, sought to put all persons on equal footing before the law. I shall argue in this dissertation that Douglass’s approach contributed to burgeoning constitutional thought in the antebellum period. To understand that contribution, we must carefully consider Douglass’s approach and how it differed from other constitutional abolitionists. I then examine how these constitutional theories played out in Reconstruction, focusing on Douglass’s actions during that time. I shall argue that Reconstruction reveals Douglass’s prudence, which led him to prioritize the politically necessary over pursuing ends that were theoretically pure but politically impossible.
History
Date Modified
2022-04-19Defense Date
2021-12-17CIP Code
- 45.1001
Research Director(s)
Vincent Phillip MuñozCommittee Members
Michael Zuckert Anthony J Bellia Kurt LashDegree
- Doctor of Philosophy
Degree Level
- Doctoral Dissertation
Alternate Identifier
1311285944Library Record
6184332OCLC Number
1311285944Additional Groups
- Political Science
Program Name
- Political Science