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One of the most vehement proponents of this argument was George Fitzhugh (1806–1881), a Virginia lawyer, writer, and slaveowner. He believed that civilization depended upon the exploitation of labor. This led him to ask which system — slavery or free labor — exploited workers less.
15 Ιουλ 2014 · The pro-slavery argument : as maintained by the most distinguished writers of the southern states : : Free Download, Borrow, and Streaming : Internet Archive. Publication date. 1852. Topics. Slavery -- Southern states, Slavery -- Justification. Collection. antislavery; oberlincollegelibrary; americana; globallibraries. Language. English. Item Size.
Published in Richmond, Virginia, in 1857, and aimed at both Northern and Southern readers, it sought to claim for the South the moral high ground in the increasingly fierce national debate over slavery.
20 Ιουν 2008 · The pro-slavery argument; as maintained by the most distinguished writers of the southern states: Publication date. 1853. Topics. Slavery -- United States, Slavery -- Justification. Publisher. Philadelphia, Lippincott, Grambo, & co. Collection. library_of_congress; americana. Contributor. The Library of Congress. Language. English. Item Size.
these arguments in juxtaposition to the abolitionist attack and construed the former as counter-propaganda addressed primarily to an audience north of the Mason and Dixon line.
Cartwright's pro-slavery argument started with an attack upon abolitionists. While visiting Europe in 1837, he had be- come convinced that London Abolitionists, through books and other means, were plotting to "stir up the Christians of the Northern states" against the South.9 In a lengthy article published in the Southern Quarterly Review in ...
It discusses early proslavery thought in the Americas, proslavery thought in the age of revolution, the role of proslavery thought in sectional conflict and postbellum sectional reconciliation, and the problem of proslavery thought in the modern world and in twentieth-century historiography.