Home
Moral Minorities and the Making of American Democracy by Kyle G. Volk, Paperback | Indigo Chapters
Loading Inventory...
Moral Minorities and the Making of American Democracy by Kyle G. Volk, Paperback | Indigo Chapters
From Kyle G. Volk
Current price: $27.50
From Kyle G. Volk
Moral Minorities and the Making of American Democracy by Kyle G. Volk, Paperback | Indigo Chapters
Current price: $27.50
Loading Inventory...
Size: 1 x 9.21 x 432
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
Should the majority always rule? If not, how should the rights of minorities be protected? In Moral Minorities and the Making of American Democracy, Kyle G. Volk unearths the origins of modern ideas and practices of minority-rights politics. Focusing on controversies spurred by the explosionof grassroots moral reform in the early nineteenth century, he shows how a motley but powerful array of self-understood minorities reshaped American democracy as they battled laws regulating Sabbath observance, alcohol, and interracial contact. Proponents justified these measures with the"democratic" axiom of majority rule. In response, immigrants, black northerners, abolitionists, liquor dealers, Catholics, Jews, Seventh-day Baptists, and others articulated a different vision of democracy requiring the protection of minority rights. These moral minorities prompted a generation ofAmericans to reassess whether "majority rule" was truly the essence of democracy, and they ensured that majority tyranny would no longer be just the fear of elites and slaveholders. Beginning in the mid-nineteenth-century, minority rights became the concern of a wide range of Americans attempting tolive in an increasingly diverse nation. Volk reveals that driving this vast ideological reckoning was the emergence of America's tradition of popular minority-rights politics. To challenge hostile laws and policies, moral minorities worked outside of political parties and at the grassroots. They mobilized elite and ordinary people to formnetworks of dissent and some of America's first associations dedicated to the protection of minority rights. They lobbied officials and used constitutions and the common law to initiate "test cases" before local and appellate courts. Indeed, the moral minorities of the mid-nineteenth centurypioneered fundamental methods of political participation and legal advocacy that subsequent generations of civil-rights and civil-liberties activists would adopt and that are widely used today. | Moral Minorities and the Making of American Democracy by Kyle G. Volk, Paperback | Indigo Chapters