The Black Literacy Journal: America’s Color-Biased Constitution
Find out why the notion that the US Constitution is a color-blind document is a myth.
Find out why the notion that the US Constitution is a color-blind document is a myth.
Read more about how the Dred Scott case revealed the Constitution wasn’t color-blind. Precedents like the Declaratory Act of 1766 and Somerset v. Stewart influenced this, denying rights to Black people.
Learn how Colonial American slavery, a criminal scheme, was nullified by British Parliament in 1766, exposing its illegitimacy and racialized laws.
George Washington was revered for his honesty for confessing to chopping down a cherry tree and never telling lies among many accolades, honors,…
James Brewer Stewart’s eloquent survey of the abolitionist movement is also a superb analysis of how the antislavery movement reinforced and transformed the…
Of humble New England origins, successful as a frontier lawyer, but disastrously unsuccessful as a land speculator, Joshua Reed Giddings entered Congress from…
Before the Civil War, slaveholders made themselves into the most powerful, most deeply rooted, and best organized private interest group within the United…
Throughout the Civil War era, no other white American spoke more powerfully against slavery and for the ideals of racial democracy than did…
Fiery, opinionated, and controversial, William Lloyd Garrison has always been identified with abolitionism in early nineteenth-century America. In his incisive biography of the…
American slavery and the legal right to restitution. Those who argue for reparations believe in equitable relief falsely believing chattel slavery was legal.…