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In the Matter of Nat Turner: A Speculative History
Hardback
Main Details
Description
A bold new interpretation of Nat Turner and the slave rebellion that stunned the American South In 1831 Virginia, Nat Turner led a band of Southampton County slaves in a rebellion that killed fifty-five whites, mostly women and children. After more than two months in hiding, Turner was captured, and quickly convicted and executed. In the Matter
Author Biography
Christopher Tomlins is the Elizabeth Josselyn Boalt Professor of Law at the University of California, Berkeley, and an affiliated research professor at the American Bar Foundation, Chicago. His many books include Freedom Bound: Law, Labor, and Civic Identity in Colonizing English America, 1580-1865 and Law, Labor, and Ideology in the Early American Republic. He lives in Berkeley.
Reviews"Winner of the Francis Parkman Prize, Society of American Historians" "Winner of the Richard Slatten Award for Excellence in Virginia Biography, Virginia Museum of History & Culture (Virginia Historical Society)" "[An] expertly constructed work, one of the handful of books on Turner destined to become essential reading for understanding the events of August 1831."---Douglas R. Egerton Le Moyne, American Historical Review "[In the Matter of Nat Turner] succeeds in challenging established assumptions about Turner's intellectual world, and it is likely that, with its publication, historians will be much more inclined to pay more attention to the importance of religion in Turner's rebellion."---Enrico Dal Iago, Journal of American History "A major achievement. Tomlins is a brilliant historian, and his study is full of many new insights that make significant contributions to our understanding. Most importantly, Tomlins is one of the only historians to pay careful attention to the mind of the rebel leader. . . . Tomlins has given us a well-researched, always interesting and intellectually stimulating new book on Nat Turner. We should be deeply grateful for this extraordinary, sparkling work of history."---Kenneth S. Greenberg, Journal of the Early Republic "You can peel off layers, break off pieces and grab chunks out of In the Matter of Nat Turner, A Speculative History by Christopher Tomlins and have what I call a good book chew. Indigestion only comes because it makes you think about what you're chewing."---Arelya J. Mitchell, The Mid-South Tribune "In the Matter of Nat Turner offers a new reading of the well-known and much written-about document purporting to record the confession of the leader of an 1831 slave rebellion in Virginia, set in the context of a thick reconstruction of the local legal and political debates about slavery and representation. Christopher Tomlins makes the argument that previous interpreters have failed to take Turner seriously as a religious thinker, reducing his visionary religious narrative to nothing more than a cover for his political objectives. . . . In the Matter of Nat Turner is a very ambitious and complex book."---Winnifred Fallers Sullivan, Journal of the American Academy of Religion "An ambitious and deeply researched intellectual achievement...In the Matter of Nat Turner stands as an exemplar and benchmark of both the depth and imagination with which we ought to engage Nat Turner and the perils imposing our own facticity upon him in the process."---M. Cooper Harriss, Religious Studies Review "[In the Matter of Nat Turner] is a book about the Nat Turner revolt as much as it is about the craft of writing history. By framing his arguments in Benjaminian terms, Tomlins succeeds in addressing questions of subaltern voices, archival silences and the limits of historical narrative . . . Tomlins makes a compelling case."---Sebastian Jobs, Annual Bulletin of Historical Literature "[A] remarkably interesting book...[In the Matter of Nat Turner is] endlessly fascinating . . . [Chris Tomlins] takes us on an illuminated mystery tour of this most mysterious of events and much else besides. . . . Enriching."---Paul Harvey, Church History "In the Matter of Nat Turner is a tour de force. . . . Tomlins's book shows how historical speculation and conjecture can be done in a way that is nonetheless solidly grounded in biblical, philosophical, anthropological, and historical context."---Angela Fernandez, Legal History "For those looking for a provocative set of speculations about Turner's religiosity, [In the Matter of Nat Turner] provides much about which to think and argue."---Vanessa M. Holden, Journal of Social History "[A] profound new book...In the Matter of Nat Turner is a book teeming with insight. Tomlins' provocative analysis of Turner's own ideas will no doubt generate fruitful debate and have to be reckoned with by scholars in a variety of fields. But beyond that, Tomlins provides us with a powerful model for how to write history that both links individual biography with broader structural analysis and that centers the perspective of those long excluded."---Aziz Rana, Legal Form "Christopher Tomlins' In the Matter of Nat Turner offers new insights into the thinking of Nat Turner and then employs those insights to meditate upon the discipline of history itself. Through his searching study of the actors and events of 1831, Tomlins interrogates contemporary historians' own thinking and practice, their blind spots and erasures, their commitment to a disciplinary machine that yields often crushingly familiar answers. For these reasons, In the Matter of Nat Turner deserves a readership not only among historians of the antebellum South, but also among all interested in history as a modern knowledge form."---Kunal Parker, Radical Philosophy "An important, 'speculative' work of intellectual history for all academic collections." * Choice Reviews * "This book is not only tremendously enjoyable, but also a very useful addition to the field of slavery and the history of resistance and rebellion in the Americas."---Laura Sandy, Slavery and Abolition "In the Matter of Nat Turner provides a master class in what it means to explore the unwritten, to engage with the fragmentary, and to expand the potentialities of historical research."---Honor Sachs, Law and History Review "[A] brilliant and challenging book. . . . Tomlins crafts a new major interpretation in this 'intellectual history of Nat Turner,' centered on a compelling account of Turner's faith and its collision with the emerging political and economic order of antebellum Virginia. . . . A richly rewarding book."---Randolph Scully, Journal of Southern History "A skillful reading and imagining of the sources . . . a compelling retelling of Nat Turner's life, beliefs, and intellect as well as the political significance of his rebellion."---Tamika Nunley, William & Mary Quarterly "Tomlins has succeeded in writing a distinctive sort of intellectual history. . . . In the Matter of Nat Turner offers much more than a new analysis of Turner's Confessions."---Bradford J. Wood, North Carolina Historical Review "An incredibly complex, erudite, and thought provoking book."---Bruce E. Baker, Journal of Religious History
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