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UNTIL JUSTICE BE DONE

Kate Masur

America's First Civil Rights Movement, from the Revolution to Reconstruction

A groundbreaking history of the antebellum movement for equal rights that reshaped the institutions of freedom after the Civil War.
The half century before the Civil War was beset with conflict over freedom as well as slavery: what were the arrangements of free society, especially for African Americans? Beginning in 1803, many free states enacted black codes that discouraged the settlement and restricted the basic rights of free black people. But claiming the equal-rights promises of the Declaration and the Constitution, a biracial movement arose to fight these racist state laws. Kate Masur's magisterial history delivers this pathbreaking movement in vivid detail. Its advocates battled in state legislatures, Congress, and the courts, and through petitioning, party politics and elections. They visited slave states to challenge local laws that imprisoned free blacks and sold them into slavery. Despite immovable white majorities and unfavorable court decisions, their vision became increasingly mainstream. After the Civil War, their arguments shaped the Civil Rights Act and the Fourteenth Amendment, the pillars of our second founding. Kate Masur is a professor of history at Northwestern University. A finalist for the Lincoln Prize, she is author and editor of acclaimed books on the Civil War and Reconstruction. She lives in Evanston, Illinois.
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Published 2021-03-23 by W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. - New York (USA)

Comments

Author op-ed on American history of authoritarianism and racism, with book in by-line Read more...

Kate Masur cited in piece on monuments: History Matters: Debates About Monuments Reflect Current Divisions Read more...

related piece on Chicago monuments - by Jenny Whidden Read more...

Revelatory... excellent... If this is a clear-eyed book, it's still a heartening one. Read more...

Interview on history of white violence in US Read more...

Kate Masur's Until Justice Be Done is a masterpiece of scope, insight, and graceful writing about the central question in the making, unmaking, and remaking of an American democracy. This is a book we will read and conjure with for a long time.

In this brilliant book, Kate Masur widens and deepens our understanding of the long struggle against racism throughout the United States.

At a time when definitions of citizenship and civil rights are again under assault, Masur's careful accounting of the ways Americans came to understand such terms provides an informed perspective to appreciate that such concepts never were, and thus never are, self-evident. They require due diligence and vigilance to secure and sustain at all levels of government. An essential book.

Kate Masur's masterpiece is an extraordinary contribution to our understanding of the central role of African Americans in conceiving American democracy.

A tour de force: Until Justice Be Done is the eloquent and essential story of what the first civil rights movement achieved, and what it left for later generations to do.

A magnificent contribution to the history of antiracism in America.

Author interviewed and featured in piece on Monument Wars by Jenny Schuessler Read more...

Until Justice Be Done tells the origin story of one of the most important and often-misunderstood ideas in American law and politics: racial equality before the law. It is a brilliant book.

CBSN/Red and Blue - interview on Lincoln's complex legacy Read more...

interview for piece on Capitol riot and Reconstruction era Read more...

A remarkable and shattering book... Breathtakingly fresh... Combining meticulous scholarship with chilling storytelling, her book should mortify any reader who still doubts that America was in many ways built on a foundation of white supremacy and black oppression.

[A] tour de force of scholarship and lucid analysis.