Numerous scholars have examined the reasons why Frederick Douglass shifted his position on the relationship between slavery and the Constitution (from embracing the Garrisonian condemnation of the document as a "covenant with death, and an agreement with hell" to embracing the position that slavery was unconstitutional) This article builds on that existing scholarship – including my own previous writings about Lysander Spooner’s interpretive philosophy – by examining Douglass’s “change of opinion,” the influence of Spooner, and why Spooner came to embrace the position that Douglass ultimately found so persuasive. Why did Spooner arrive at (and then write an exceptionally detailed two-part treatise explaining) the conclusion that not only was the Constitution anti-slavery but also that slavery itself was unconstitutional? I argue that a detailed analysis of Spooner’s legal education helps us to answer that question.Download the article from SSRN at the link.
August 3, 2023
Knowles-Gardner on Arriving as an Answer to the "The Question of Questions": How Lysander Spooner's Legal Education Influenced His (and Frederick Douglass's) Belief That Slavery Was Unconstitutional @KnowlesGardner @InstFreeSpeech @GeorgetownJLPP
Helen J. Knowles-Gardner, Institute for Free Speech, is publishing Arriving at an Answer to the ‘The Question of Questions’: How Lysander Spooner’s Legal Education Influenced His (and Frederick Douglass’s) Belief That Slavery Was Unconstitutional in volume 22 of the Georgetown Journal of Law & Public Policy. Here is the abstract.
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