A Hideous Monster of the Mind: American Race Theory in the Early Republic / Edition 1

A Hideous Monster of the Mind: American Race Theory in the Early Republic / Edition 1

by Bruce Dain
ISBN-10:
0674009460
ISBN-13:
9780674009462
Pub. Date:
02/21/2003
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
ISBN-10:
0674009460
ISBN-13:
9780674009462
Pub. Date:
02/21/2003
Publisher:
Harvard University Press
A Hideous Monster of the Mind: American Race Theory in the Early Republic / Edition 1

A Hideous Monster of the Mind: American Race Theory in the Early Republic / Edition 1

by Bruce Dain
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Overview

The intellectual history of race, one of the most pernicious and enduring ideas in American history, has remained segregated into studies of black or white traditions. Bruce Dain breaks this separatist pattern with an integrated account of the emergence of modern racial consciousness in the United States from the Revolution to the Civil War. A Hideous Monster of the Mind reveals that ideas on race crossed racial boundaries in a process that produced not only well-known theories of biological racism but also countertheories that were early expressions of cultural relativism, cultural pluralism, and latter-day Afrocentrism.

From 1800 to 1830 in particular, race took on a new reality as Americans, black and white, reacted to postrevolutionary disillusionment, the events of the Haitian Revolution, the rise of cotton culture, and the entrenchment of slavery. Dain examines not only major white figures like Thomas Jefferson and Samuel Stanhope Smith, but also the first self-consciously "black" African-American writers. These various thinkers transformed late-eighteenth-century European environmentalist "natural history" into race theories that combined culture and biology and set the terms for later controversies over slavery and abolition. In those debates, the ethnology of Samuel George Morton and Josiah Nott intertwined conceptually with important writing by black authors who have been largely forgotten, like Hosea Easton and James McCune Smith. Scientific racism and the idea of races as cultural constructions were thus interrelated aspects of the same effort to explain human differences.

In retrieving neglected African-American thinkers, reestablishing the European intellectual background to American racial theory, and demonstrating the deep confusion "race" caused for thinkers black and white, A Hideous Monster of the Mind offers an engaging and enlightening new perspective on modern American racial thought.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780674009462
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Publication date: 02/21/2003
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 334
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.94(h) x 1.25(d)

About the Author

Bruce Dain is Associate Professor of History at the University of Utah.

Table of Contents

Preface

1. The Face of Nature

2. Culture and the Persistence of Race

3. The Horrors of St. Domingue

4. The Mutability of Human Affairs

5. Conceiving Universal Equality

6. Black Immediatism

7. The New Ethnology

8. Effacing the Individual

Notes

Index

What People are Saying About This

The book's many virtues include a fresh angle on scientific racialism--one which presents an important engagement of minds across the color line, and which nicely sets the development of the concept of "race" within the broad context of natural history debates. The book likewise provides some fine distillations of major scientific treatises; and the narrative attention to individuals, not just ideas, is effective--here is a vivid gallery of characters. All of this is carried out in a clean and often charmingly ironic prose.

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