Ch 12 Chapter Study Outline
Chapter 12 Study Outline
- The reform impulse
- Overall patterns
- Voluntary associations
- Wide-ranging targets and objectives
- Activities and tactics
- Breadth of appeal
- Utopian communities
- Overall patterns
- Varieties of structures and purposes
- Common visions
- Cooperative organization of society
- Social harmony
- Narrowing of gap between rich and poor
- Gender equality
- Spiritual communities
- Shakers
- Outlooks on gender and property
- Outcome
- Mormons
- Book of Mormon linked Native Americans and early Jewish immigrants
- Controversial practice of polygamy
- Oneida
- John Humphrey Noyes
- Outlooks on gender and property
- Outcome
- Worldly communities
- Brook Farm
- Transcendentalist origins
- Influence of Charles Fourier
- Outlooks on labor and leisure
- Outcome
- New Harmony
- Communitarianism of Robert Owen
- Forerunner at New Lanark, Scotland
- Outlooks on labor, education, gender, and community
- Outcome
- Utopia and Modern Times
- Anarchism of Josiah Warren
- Outlooks on labor, exchange, and gender
- Outcome
- Limits of mainstream appeal
- Mainstream reform movements
- Religion of reform
- From external "servitudes" (e.g., slavery, war)
- From internal "servitudes" (e.g., drink, illiteracy, crime)
- Influence of Second Great Awakening
- "Perfectionism"
- Appeal in "burnt-over districts"
- Radicalization of reform causes
- Badge of middle-class respectability
- Critics of reform
- Leading sources
- Workers
- Catholics
- Immigrants
- Points of controversy
- Temperance crusade
- Perfectionism
- Imposition of middle-class Protestant morality
- Reformers and freedom
- Impulse for liberation, individual freedom
- Impulse for moral order, social control
- The invention of the asylum; institution building
- Jails
- Poorhouses
- Asylums
- Orphanages
- Common schools
- Thomas Mann
- As embodiment of reform agenda
- Reception and outcome
- Crusade against slavery
- American Colonization Society
- Founding
- Principles
- Gradual abolition
- Removal of freed blacks to Africa
- Establishment of Liberia
- Skepticism over
- Following
- In North
- In South
- Blacks and colonization
- Emigration to Liberia
- Opposition
- First black national convention
- Insistence on equal rights, as Americans
- Take-off of militant abolitionism
- Distinctive spirit and themes
- Demand for immediate abolition
- Explosive denunciations of slavery
- As a sin
- As incompatible with American freedom
- Rejection of colonization
- Insistence on racial equality, rights for blacks
- Active role of blacks in movement
- Mobilization of public opinion
- Moral suasion
- Initiatives and methods
- Founding of American Anti-Slavery Society (AAAS)
- Printed propaganda
- Oratory; public meetings
- Petitions
- Pioneering figures and publications
- David Walker; An Appeal to the Coloured Citizens of the World
- William Lloyd Garrison
- The Liberator
- Thoughts on African Colonization
- Theodore Weld; Slavery as It Is
- Lydia Maria Child; An Appeal In Favor of That Class of Americans Called Africans
- Spread of the abolitionist message
- Strongholds of support
- A new vision of America
- Self-ownership as basis of freedom
- Priority of personal liberty over rights to property or local self-government
- Freedom as universal entitlement, regardless of race
- Right to bodily integrity
- Identification with revolutionary heritage
- Black and white abolitionism
- Black abolitionism
- As opponents of colonization
- As readers and supporters of The Liberator
- As members and officers of AAAS
- As organizers and speakers
- As writers
- Abolitionism and race
- Persistence of prejudice among white abolitionists
- White dominance of leadership positions
- Growing black quest for independent role
- Remarkable degree of egalitarianism among white abolitionists
- Anti-discrimination efforts in North
- Spirit of interracial solidarity
- Black abolitionists' distinctive stands on freedom and Americanness
- Exceptional hostility to racism
- Exceptional impatience with celebrations of American liberty; "Freedom celebrations"
- Exceptional commitment to color-blind citizenship
- Exceptional insistence on economic dimension to freedom
- Frederick Douglass's historic Fourth of July oration
- Slavery and civil liberties
- Assault on abolitionism
- Mob violence
- Attack on Garrison in Boston
- Attack on James G. Birney in Cincinnati
- Fatal attack on Elijah P. Lovejoy in Alton, Illinois
- Suppression
- Removal of literature from mails
- "Gag rule" on petitions to House of Representatives
- Resulting spread of antislavery sentiment in North
- Split within AAAS
- Points of conflict
- Role of women in movement
- Garrisonian radicalism
- Relationship of abolitionism to American politics
- Outcome
- Formation of rival American and Foreign Anti-Slavery Society
- Founding of Liberty party
- Weak performance of Liberty party in 1840 election
- Origins of feminism
- Rise of the public woman
- Importance of women at grassroots of abolitionism
- Forms of involvement in public sphere
- Petition drives
- Meetings
- Parades
- Oratory
- Range of reform movements involving women
- Abolitionism as seedbed for feminist movement
- New awareness of women's subordination
- Path-breaking efforts of Angelina and Sarah Grimké
- Impassioned antislavery addresses
- Controversy over women lecturers
- Sarah Grimké's Letters on the Equality of the Sexes
- Launching of women's rights movement; Seneca Falls Convention
- Roots in abolitionism
- Influence of Grimké sisters
- Leadership of antislavery veterans Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott
- Seneca Falls Declaration of Sentiments
- Echoes of Declaration of Independence
- Demand for suffrage
- Denunciation of wide-ranging inequalities
- Characteristics of feminism
- International scope
- Middle-class orientation
- Themes of feminism
- Self-realization
- Transcendentalist sensibility
- Margaret Fuller's Woman in the Nineteenth Century
- Right to participate in market revolution
- Denial that home is women's "sphere"
- Amelia Bloomer's new style of dress
- "Slavery of sex"—analogy between marriage and slavery
- Laws governing wives' economic status
- Law of domestic relations
- The abolitionist schism; tensions within feminist thought
- Belief in equality of the sexes
- Belief in natural differences
Last modified: Tuesday, March 1, 2011, 6:28 AM