Free Men, Freedmen, and Race: Black Social Theory in the Gilded Age

1978 ◽  
Vol 44 (4) ◽  
pp. 571
Author(s):  
William Toll
Keyword(s):  
Author(s):  
Gillis J. Harp

Richard Hofstadter argued that the new laissez-faire conservatism that became dominant during the last third of the nineteenth century was different from its predecessors in several respects, including in its secularism. Some popular preachers still attempted to accommodate laissez-faire principles and socially conservative evangelical Protestantism. A few conservatives refused to accept much of the new conservatism. These Protestant clerical intellectuals (both northern and southern) dissented from conservatism’s new orientation and offered a social theory still rooted in Protestant theology. This chapter highlights where these old-fashioned dissidents differed from their fellow conservatives and seeks also to describe their alternative conservative vision. Their story serves to clarify just how significant a shift occurred among conservatives during the Gilded Age and illuminates the last gasp of a more theocratic tradition among American Protestants.


1976 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-51
Author(s):  
Bob Lawson-Peebles

The Gilded Age saw the emergence of a number of figures who produced alternative theories to the dominant doctrine of laissez-faire. One such alternative theorist was Henry George (1839–97), a man of pronounced individualist proclivities who invoked the Jeffersonian tradition of sturdy agrarian independence as a corrective to an unbalanced economy which, he believed, was driving a destructive wedge between rich and poor. Today, George is regarded primarily as an economic reformer and his best-selling book with its jingling title, Progress and Poverty (1879), is read for its analysis of post-bellum America and for the panacea that it propounds: a levy on the value of land which, because it was designed to replace all other taxes, came to be called the Single Tax. In contrast, George's religious beliefs have received scant attention from his biographers and historians of the period, who have done little more than note that he was a devout Christian. This oversight has been rectified in a recent article by Fred Nicklason, ‘ Henry George: Social Gospeller ’, which draws attention to the religious orientation of George's writings and discusses his relations with churchmen. Yet although Nicklason stresses the importance of George's religious activity, he asserts that ‘ George himself moved from an initial concern for the single tax as a social reform to a deep-seated regard for its divine sanction ’. I believe that this is a misconception of George, and I shall try to show that his visionary experience led him to regard himself as a religious leader and prompted him to formulate his social theory. I also hope to demonstrate that his messianic pretensions grew with his following and that it was his religious role, rather than the Single Tax, which during his lifetime not only made disciples but also influenced theorists who were otherwise unsympathetic to his economic bolus.


Author(s):  
Brynne D. Ovalle ◽  
Rahul Chakraborty

This article has two purposes: (a) to examine the relationship between intercultural power relations and the widespread practice of accent discrimination and (b) to underscore the ramifications of accent discrimination both for the individual and for global society as a whole. First, authors review social theory regarding language and group identity construction, and then go on to integrate more current studies linking accent bias to sociocultural variables. Authors discuss three examples of intercultural accent discrimination in order to illustrate how this link manifests itself in the broader context of international relations (i.e., how accent discrimination is generated in situations of unequal power) and, using a review of current research, assess the consequences of accent discrimination for the individual. Finally, the article highlights the impact that linguistic discrimination is having on linguistic diversity globally, partially using data from the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and partially by offering a potential context for interpreting the emergence of practices that seek to reduce or modify speaker accents.


2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sin Sze Cecilia Yiu ◽  
Ronald M. Miller ◽  
Diana L. Mahony

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