"Was the American Constitution as originally ratified a proslavery document? In this unflinching, deeply intelligent, and persuasive work, David Waldstreicher answers yes. Sure to spark interest and debate, Slavery's Constitution is an immensely engaging and valuable contribution to the literature on the founding of the American nation." -Annette Gordon-Reed "Succinct and shrewd, David Waldstreicher's Slavery's Constitution enables us to understand a central element of American political practice that the founders sought to obscure." -Linda K. Kerber "David Waldstreicher's intriguing new book brilliantly shows the founding fathers' republican constitution to be, in important part, central to their many evasions of slavery's antirepublican nature." -William W. Freehling "With as light a touch as its hard truths permit, Slavery's Constitution explains the deep, complex, and pervasive entanglement that ultimately doomed the United States to civil war." -Robin L.
Einhorn "David Waldstreicher's brilliant little book sets the terms of debate for all further discussion of slavery and the Constitution." -James Oakes "Highly readable and provocative in conception." -Thomas J. Davis, Library Journal "A closely argued critique that exposes the deadly implications of the Constitution's careful euphemisms about slavery." - Kirkus Reviews After they won the revolution, how did the framers of our government deal with slavery without becoming hypocrites? They didn't-and instead wove slavery into their Constitution to ensure its perpetuation, historian David Waldstreicher persuasively argues in his slender, provocative book." -Cameron McWhirter, The Atlanta Journal-Constitution "Waldstreicher's interpretation is likely to be controversial, but then, he is no stranger to examining the tarnish on American icons. In Runaway America , he questioned the anti-slavery credentials of Benjamin Franklin. Little wonder that he concludes here that 'Slavery's Constitution,' not slavery itself,caused the Civil War.
" -Roger K. Miller, Chicago Sun-Times "An important contribution." -Claude R. Marx, The Boston Globe "In this important new book, [Waldstreicher] writes that while the U.S. Constitution never mentions slavery, 'slavery is all over the document.' " -Steve Goddard, Historywire.com"An interesting exploration of the influence of slavery on early American politics and life.
" -Curled Up with a Good Book "In a succinct but carefully reasoned study, Temple University history professor David Waldstreicher shows how slave state delegates to the Constitutional Convention leveraged the issue to their advantage, and how ardent federalists from the North, many of them opposed to slavery, came to a consensus of silence over the Constitution's role in countenancing slavery." -David Luhrssen, Shepherd Express " Slavery's Constitution will certainly set the terms of the debate over the institution of human bondage and the 1787 Constitution for years to come." -Erik J. Chaput, The Providence Journal .