Christopher James Bonner is Associate Professor of History at the University of Maryland.
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Description
Introduction: Making Black Citizenship Politics Chapter 1. An Integral Portion of This Republic Chapter 2. "Union Is Strength": Building an American Citizenship Chapter 3. Nations, Revolutions, and the Borders of Citizenship Chapter 4. Runaways, or Citizens Claimed as Such Chapter 5. Contesting the "Foul and Infamous Lie" of Dred Scott Chapter 6. Black Politics and the Roots of Reconstruction Epilogue: The Enduring Search for Home Notes Index Acknowledgments
"In Remaking the Republic, Christopher James Bonner examines the early political struggles of free African Americans that helped to define citizenship after the Civil War, as well as the tools they used...One of the strengths of Bonner's book lies in his recovering of the ideas and lives of the largely unknown Black activists involved in these conventions, like Samuel H. Davis and William C. Munroe." (The New York Review of Books) "Remaking the Republic makes an important contribution to the intellectual, political, and legal history of the United States...[N]ot simply a snapshot of free Black Americans' lives in the nineteenth century, [it] is also an origin story that acknowledges and critically surveys the integral role of free Black Americans in the making of American citizenship." (Journal of the Civil War Era) "Christopher James Bonner's Remaking the Republic is a fascinating study of African Americans' struggle to be recognized as citizens in the antebellum and Civil War-era United States. . . . Remaking the Republic is an invaluable contribution to the growing body of work demonstrating the extent to which African Americans were responsible for achieving their own liberation in the United States and beyond." (Intellectual History Review) "Christopher Bonner's well-researched book deftly explores specific forms of political work that Black activists pursued in the fight for citizenship in the United States...Bonner's writing and analysis compels readers to appreciate the diversity of thought as a hallmark of Black protest politics and the intellectual labor of Black activists in constructing the American Republic." (Early American Literature) "[A] rich analysis of how American citizenship was fashioned and defended by African American politicking...By emphasizing the influence of Black activism on the development of American citizenship, Bonner reinforces the need for historians to explore extra-legal modes of belonging. Ultimately, the texture of what it means to be an American citizen can only be fully understood through the lens of those making claims to it." (American Nineteenth Century History) "In Remaking the Republic, Christopher James Bonner provides a detailed account of how African Americans, especially in the antebellum North, participated in a constitutional dialogue about who is a "citizen" and about what legal and political rights go along with citizenship.Bonner has mined primary resources to produce a scholarly gem that enriches our knowledge on this valuable subject." (The North Carolina Historical Review) "How could free black people in the antebellum era, relegated to an apparent caste status, sustain hope in a future in America? By making and remaking the idea of legal belonging through a fascinating array of grassroots politics and protest, argues Christopher James Bonner. With deep research and persuasive writing, Bonner demonstrates that the sheer 'uncertainty' of American definitions of citizenship opened ways on the margins for blacks to exploit and forge the developing republic before emancipation. This book is full of riveting stories about race and the American political imagination, of how freedom and citizenship took root in a hostile legal soil, and about the enduring power of collective struggle, however rancorous the schisms or how high the racist obstacles. Antebellum blacks used events and the nation's own creeds to make their future American." (David W. Blight, author of the Pulitizer Prize-winning Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom) "Remaking the Republic is a must read for anyone seeking to understand how citizenship has evolved in the United States. Christopher James Bonner show us how black Americans were the first architects of national belonging in the early republic. His ambitious research tells a story about how they countered the racism of colonization schemes and black laws with a shrewd insistence upon their rights as citizens. This inspiring quest contains indispensable lessons about the past and for our own time." (Martha Jones, author of Birthright Citizens: A History of Race and Rights in Antebellum America) "By taking us inside black activists' multifaceted fight for inclusion across much of the nineteenth century, Christopher James Bonner has crafted one of the most compelling, comprehensive stories about black citizenship in all its many manifestations to date." (Anne Twitty, author of Before Dred Scott: Slavery and Legal Culture in the American Confluence, 1787-1857)

