
Published online:
18 August 2016
Published in print:
03 July 2013
Online ISBN:
9780801469442
Print ISBN:
9780801451614
Contents
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“Equity,” Antislavery, and Gender Politics “Equity,” Antislavery, and Gender Politics
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Rising Antislavery and “Sore Afflictions” Rising Antislavery and “Sore Afflictions”
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Flight Flight
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Chapter
1 The Brown Family’s Antislavery Culture, 1831–49
Get access
Pages
11–29
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Published:July 2013
Cite
Laughlin-Schultz, Bonnie, 'The Brown Family’s Antislavery Culture, 1831–49', The Tie That Bound Us: The Women of John Brown's Family and the Legacy of Radical Abolitionism (Ithaca, NY , 2013; online edn, Cornell Scholarship Online, 18 Aug. 2016), https://doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9780801451614.003.0002, accessed 24 Apr. 2025.
Abstract
This chapter describes the discipline-centered culture of John Brown's family, to trace their belief in the abolition of slavery. John Brown thought of each child as he thought of himself: as someone constantly exposed to and needing to fight temptation. Images of Brown happily embracing corporal punishment are often linked to his Puritan outlook and belief in an Old Testament God. Both John and Mary Brown stood out from the core abolitionist beliefs that had emerged from the Second Great Awakening and associated reforms.
Keywords:
John Brown, Second Great Awakening, Puritan outlook, abolitionist belief, Puritan belief, slavery
Subject
History of the Americas
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