Raymond James Krohn is an Assistant Professor of History at Boise State University. As a historian of the United States, he specializes in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, slavery and abolition, social movements, and political, intellectual, and cultural history.
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Introduction: What Is Abolitionism Now? From the Disposition of the AASS to the Determinants of Abolitionist History 1 1 Antislavery Moderated: Samuel Joseph May and the Lessons of Respectable Reform 19 2 Antislavery Elevated: William Wells Brown and the Purpose of Black Activism 45 3 Antislavery Vindicated: Oliver Johnson and the Value of Abolitionism's Grand Old Party 72 4 Antislavery Sanctified: Parker Pillsbury and the Spirit of Abolitionism in the Fields 100 5 A Tale of Two Slaveries: Aaron Macy Powell and the Transfiguration of Abolitionism 125 6 Songs of Innocence and Experience: Thomas Wentworth Higginson and the Abdication of Abolitionism 154 7 What Was Antislavery For? From the Disbandment of the AASS to the Determination of Abolitionist Women 191 Coda: Complicated Legacies 219 Acknowledgments 221 Notes 225 Index 269

