Ryan P. Jordan explores the limits of religious dissent in antebellum America; and reminds us of the difficulties facing reformers who tried peacefully to end slavery. In the years before the Civil War; the Society of Friends opposed the abolitionist campaign for an immediate end to slavery and considered abolitionists within the church as heterodox radicals seeking to destroy civil and religious liberty. In response; many Quaker abolitionists began to build "comeouter" institutions where social and legal inequalities could be freely discussed; and where church members could fuse religious worship with social activism. The conflict between the Quakers and the Abolitionists highlights the dilemma of liberal religion within a slaveholding republic.
#3179519 in Books 1989-12-01Original language:EnglishPDF # 1 9.62 x .68 x 6.47l; #File Name: 0253312590202 pages
Review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. Slave Revolts in Ancient RomeBy P. WebsterSome historians claim that our disgust at the slavery of the ancient world is an anachronistic reaction because the Greeks and Romans themselves took the existence of slavery for granted. Bradley's book shows that this claim is largely false; but that in one respect it contains an element of truth.It is false because the slaves themselves certainly did not passively accept their situation. Bradley sees the slaves as "human agents" who were constantly resisting the cruelty and exploitation they were subjected to. It is true that there were only three large-scale slave revolts in ancient Rome: two in Sicily in the second century BC; and the most famous one led by Spartacus from 73 to 71BC. But small-scale resistance was widespread.The most usual form of resistance was to attempt to achieve freedom by running away. Bradley relates the inspiring example of one of Cicero's slaves who did this and who was never recaptured. But there was also the sabotage or theft of slave-owners' property; suicide; and quite a few local; small-scale revolts which were quickly suppressed.Full-scale revolt was rare because of the risks involved and because of the lack of unity amongst the slaves who came from many different parts of the world and did a variety of different jobs. The three large-scale rebellions all started off as spontaneous; local revolts caused by extreme provocation. They were not planned in advance; but they snowballed until they involved tens of thousands of slaves who; in the case of the Spartacus revolt; at one time threatened Rome itself.However; the claim that slavery was taken for granted in the ancient world does contain an element of truth; in the sense that no one was putting forward a coherent set of ideas advocating the destruction of slave society and its replacement by something else. The slaves wanted to get out of the situation they were in: they wanted their freedom. But they did not have an alternative to the system. (For example; the slave leaders in Sicily set themselves up as kings; with all the associated trappings.)There was also the problem that despite the growth of large estates owned by the rich and farmed by slaves; the majority of the population were small peasants and other free poor; not slaves. Few of these free poor seem to have joined the slave revolts.Of course this comes as no surprise to Marxists. At that stage of development a classless society was not a material possibility. If the slaves had won; the only possible outcomes were either escape from the control of the Roman state or the slave leaders becoming a new ruling elite.Unfortunately; Bradley is not a Marxist. He claims that the class struggle approach is "inherently inappropriate" for explaining the slave revolts. This is because he mistakenly thinks that a Marxist approach would mean seeing the slave revolts as class-conscious; planned affairs with worked-out aims for an alternative society. He thinks that Marxists are wrong because the slaves were driven to revolt by their experience of brutality and degradation; not by "ideological imperatives".This is a caricature of the Marxist view. Marxists argue that class struggle is the inevitable outcome of exploitation. But that does not mean that the participants in the struggle are necessarily fully class conscious or politically aware. The fact that it was the exploitation of the slaves which drove them to rebel is precisely what a Marxist approach would suggest. No Marxist would expect slaves in ancient Rome to have a fully developed Bolshevik programme.Bradley also emphasises the spontaneity of the revolts in a manner which leads the book at times to become deflating rather than inspiring. For example; instead of celebrating the fact that tens of thousands of slaves joined the revolts; he suggests that the growth in numbers was a problem because it made organisation difficult and invited Roman retribution.Despite its weaknesses; though; this book can fill out our knowledge and understanding of some truly inspiring rebellions by the oppressed and exploited.Phil Webster.(England)