![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Why does the brief period known as Reconstruction, a century and a half ago, still influence the state of the Union so heavily?Īs the eminent historian Eric Foner explains in “The Second Founding,” the failure of the United States “to build an egalitarian society on the ashes of slavery” between 18 - the years conventionally associated with Reconstruction - left defining national issues unresolved: who should have the right to vote who should get citizenship and the imprimatur of belonging in the United States and how to provide equal opportunity for people who lack wealth and power.Ī generation ago, in his masterly account “Reconstruction: America’s Unfinished Revolution,” Foner detailed why the attempt to rebuild the country on a racially egalitarian footing after the Civil War failed: political factionalism, financial corruption and the vindictive President Andrew Johnson’s efforts to subvert reform an economic depression that triggered “a resurgence of overt racism” and a campaign of terror against blacks that went unchecked by law enforcement. ![]() THE SECOND FOUNDING How the Civil War and Reconstruction Remade the Constitution By Eric Foner ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |