Solid Recent Scholarship On Lincoln
Our sixteenth president remains unique in his continued ability to inspire study and reflection among a broad group of Americans beyond the class of professional historians. For example, living in the Washington, D.C. area, I am fortunate to have access to the programs of the Abraham Lincoln Institute, a scholarly organization which aptly describes itself as presenting "The Latest in Lincoln Scholarship" to a broad audience. Every year, the Institute hosts a day-long Symposium in which Lincoln scholars share their research and thoughts about Lincoln with an audience consisting of people from all backgrounds, walks of life, and parts of the United States. (Typically, the Seminar also includes a delicious free lunch.) It is a day I look forward to every year.
I was reminded of the Lincoln Symposium and its approach by "Our Lincoln: New Perspectives on Lincoln and his World" (2008) edited by Eric Foner. The book consists of eleven new essays written by distinguished scholars on various aspects of Lincoln's life, achievement, and legacy. Foner is the DeWitt Clinton Professor of History at Columbia University. He is best-known for his study "Reconstruction: America's Unfinished Revolution", a book which markedly changed Americans's understanding of the difficult Reconstruction Era. The contibutors to the volume include James McPherson, Mark Neely, Sean Wilentz, Harolds Holzer, James Oakes, Eric Foner, Manisha Sinha, Andrew Delbanco, Richard Carwardine, Catherine Clinton, and David Blight.
The essays are divided into four parts, including four essays on Lincoln as President, three essays on Lincoln as Emancipator, three essays on Lincoln the Man, and a conluding essay by David Blight on Lincoln in current politics and public memory. If there is a singly theme connecting the essays it is that of change and growth. Several of the essays show how Lincoln ideas and programs evolved during his life and during his presidency as circumstances changed and he grew wiser.
James McPhersons's essay "A. Lincoln, Commander in Chief" is the only one in the volume with a predominantly military focus. It shows in its brief scope how Lincoln developed as a military leader during the Civil War.
Mark Neely's essay "The Constitution and Civil Liberties under Lincoln" stresses change as well. Neely shows how Lincoln changed from repressive activities towards civil liberties in the early and middle parts of the war to a much more open stance as he moved late in the conflict, against the advice of his generals, to end martial law in Missouri.
The three essays on Lincoln as Emancipator form a valuable triolgy, not least because the authors do not share the same perspectives. James Oakes takes a close look at a complex subject: Lincoln's attitudes towards slavery and towards race, in a careful essay which differentiates various forms of "rights", including natural rights, citizenship rights, states's rights and black rights, and showing how Lincoln's attitides developed towards each. Eric Foner's own essay "Lincoln and Colonization" examines the extent of Lincoln's support for the movement to colonize American blacks in Africa or in Central America. Many Americans remain unfamiliar with this aspect of Lincoln. Lincoln supported the colonization movement, to a greater or lesser degree, at least through the issuance of the Emancipation Proclamation in 1863. Manisha Sinha's essay, "Allies for Emancipation"? examines Lincoln's changing attitudes towards emancipation by comparing them with the program of African American abolitionists, such as Frederick Douglass. She argues that Lincoln became close to these Abolitionists as the war proceeded.
Additional essays with the broad theme of change include Richard Carwardine's study of Lincoln's changing attitude towards religion from the free-thinking of his youth to the apparent belief in divine providence (but not in any traditional religious denomination or creed) late in his life. Catherine Clinton's essay "Abraham Lincoln: The Family that Made him, the Family he Made" examines Lincoln's early years and his marriage. Both these subjects are enshrouded in controversy. Clinton argues that Lincoln moved from his frontier roots and his awkwardness with women in his early years to enjoy a modern and essentially happy form of companionate marriage with Mary Todd Lincoln.
Of the articles which I haven't mentioned above, Andrew Delblanco's "Lincoln's Sacramental Language" is particularly valuable for its study of the literary quality of Lincoln's speeches and writings.
In general, the essays in this book synthesize and explain recent thinking about Lincoln rather than striking out in new directions. They will be of greatest value to the serious lay reader who wants to reflect on Lincoln's accomplishments and continued importance.
Robin Friedman