Racial Relationship in The American Context: An Ideology
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Asian Institute of Research, Journal Publication, Journal Academics, Education Journal, Asian Institute
Asian Institute of Research, Journal Publication, Journal Academics, Education Journal, Asian Institute

Journal of Social and Political

Sciences

ISSN 2615-3718 (Online)

ISSN 2621-5675 (Print)

asia insitute of research, journal of social and political sciences, jsp, aior, journal publication, humanities journal, social journa
asia insitute of research, journal of social and political sciences, jsp, aior, journal publication, humanities journal, social journa
asia insitute of research, journal of social and political sciences, jsp, aior, journal publication, humanities journal, social journa
asia insitute of research, journal of social and political sciences, jsp, aior, journal publication, humanities journal, social journa
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Published: 10 July 2019

Racial Relationship in The American Context: An Ideology

Majed S. Allehaibi

Jazan University

journal of social and political sciences
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doi

10.31014/aior.1991.02.03.91

Pages: 504-507

Keywords: Slavery, Segregation, Abolitionist, Ideology

Abstract

The story of racial relationship throughout the “American experience” is an example that demonstrates pragmatic thinking, the Hegelian dialectic of historical movement. Luis Menand writes in “The Metaphysical Club,” about the “disestablishmentarian impulse in American culture,” which entails constant change and progress.

References

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  2. Fitzhugh, G. (1857) Cannibals All! Or, Slaves Without Masters. A. Morris Publisher.

  3. Fredrickson, G. (1971) The Black Image in the White Mind: The Debate on Afro-American Character and Destiny. Harper & Row.

  4. Genovese, Eugene. (1988) The World the Slaveholders Made. Wesleyan University Press.

  5. Gilmore, Glenda E. (1996) “Gender and Jim Crow: Women and the politics of White Supremacy in North Carolina, 1896-1920.” Gender and American Culture. University of North Carolina Press.

  6. Guelzo, A. (2018) Reconstruction: A Concise History. Oxford University Press.

  7. Guelzo, A. (2004) Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation: The End of Slavery in America. Simon & Schuster.

  8. Kobylka, J. & Carter, B. (1987) “Madison, The Federalist, and the Constitutional Order: Human Nature and Institutional Structure.” Polity, 20(Winter): 190–208.

  9. Kobylka, J. (2006) “The Cycles of American Political Thought.”  Lecture Series.  Chantilly, VA.

  10. Menand, L. (2002) The Metaphysical club: A Story of Ideas in America. Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

  11. Peterson, T. V. (1978) Ham and Japheth: the Mythic World of Whites in the Antebellum South. Scarecrow Press and the American Theological Library Association.

  12. Washington, B. T. (1901) Up From Slavery:  An Autobiography.  Hardpress Limited.

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