A New Birth of Freedom: Abraham Lincoln and the Coming of the Civil WarA New Birth of Freedom is the culmination of over a half a century of study and reflection by one of America's foremost scholars of American politics, Harry V. Jaffa. This long-awaited sequel to Crisis of the House Divided, first published in 1959, continues Jaffa's piercing examination of the political thought of Abraham Lincoln and the themes of self-government, equality, and statesmanship. Whereas Crisis of the House Divided focused on the famous senate campaign debates between Lincoln and Stephen Douglas, this volume expands and deepens Jaffa's analysis of American political thought, and gives special attention to Lincoln's refutation of the arguments of John C. Calhoun--the intellectual champion of the Confederacy. According to Jaffa, the Civil War is the characteristic event in American history--not because it represents a statistical frequency, but rather because through the conflict of that war we are able to understand what is fundamentally at stake in the American experiment in self-government. |
Contents
The Election of 1800 and the Election of 1860 | 1 |
The Declaration of Independence the Gettysburg Address and the Historians | 73 |
The Divided American Mind on the Eve of Conflict James Buchanan Jefferson Davis and Alexander Stephens Survey the Crisis | 153 |
The Mind of Lincolns Inaugural and the Argument and Action of the Debate That Shaped ItI | 237 |
The Mind of Lincolns Inaugural and the Argument and Action of the Debate That Shaped ItIf | 285 |
July 4 1861 Lincoln Tells Why the Union Must Be Preserved | 357 |
Other editions - View all
A New Birth of Freedom: Abraham Lincoln and the Coming of the Civil War Harry V. Jaffa Limited preview - 2000 |
A New Birth of Freedom: Abraham Lincoln and the Coming of the Civil War Harry V. Jaffa No preview available - 2018 |
Common terms and phrases
Abraham Lincoln according Alexander Stephens American Revolution antislavery appeal argument Aristotle Articles Articles of Confederation assertion authority Becker become believed Britain British Buchanan Calhoun cause Christian citizens claim colonies common compact concurrent majority Confederate Congress consent constitutional right constitutionally created equal debates Declaration of Independence denied despotism divine right doctrine Douglas Douglas's Dred Scott election electoral ernment existence fact federal Federalist Federalist Papers freedom fugitive slave Gettysburg Address human idea inaugural individual institutions interest Jefferson Davis justice justify laws of nature legislation liberty Madison majority rule mankind means ment mind moral nation natural rights Negroes never opinion party political community popular sovereignty president principles proslavery question race ratified reason regime republic republican right of revolution secede secession Senate slavery social South Carolina Southern speech Stephens stitution Summary View Taney Taney's territories theory tion truth tyranny Union United Virginia vote