To the Home Page of the National Humanities Center Web Site National Humanities Center Toolbox Library: Primary Resources in U.S. History and Literature  contact us | site guide | search 
Toolbox Library, primary resources thematically organized with notes and discussion questionsOnline Seminars, professional development seminars for history and literature teachersThe Triumph of Nationalism/The House Dividing, 1815-1850
The Triumph of Nationalism/The House Dividing
Topic: Culture of the Common ManTopic: Cult of DomesticityTopic: ReligionTopic: ExpansionTopic: America in 1850
Topic: Expansion
Overview of Triumph of Nationalism
Resource Menu: Expansion
Text 1. Charles Sellers
Text 2. Hezekiah Niles
Text 3. Elias Boudinot
Text 4. Lewis Cass
Text 5. James Glover Baldwin
Text 6. George Fitzhugh
•  Reading Guide
» Link

Text 7. Henry David Thoreau
Text 8. Harriet Beecher Stowe


RESOURCE MENU Reading Guide » Link

Link Page
6.  George Fitzhugh, Sociology for the South; or, The Failure of Free Society, 1854
Ch. 5: "Negro Slavery"


Sociology for the South; or, The Failure of Free Society
Link
https://docsouth.unc.edu/fitzhughsoc/fitzhugh.html

Note: On this page, scroll down to page 82 to read Ch. 5.


Online
Source


Documenting the American South
The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Libraries


Printing

If you choose to print this text:
-   Copy/paste chapter 5 into a word-processing
    document, remove extraneous paragraph
    marks and spacing, and print the document.
-   Length: 5 1/4 pages in 12-point text with 1" margins,
    single-spaced.

Supplemental
sites


Brief overview of Fitzhugh, from the site

Overview of Fitzhugh and Sociology, from Fairfield University






Toolbox: The Triumph of Nationalism / The House Dividing
Common Man | Cult of Domesticity | Religion | Expansion | America in 1850

Contact Us | Site Guide | Search


Toolbox Library: Primary Resources in U.S. History and Literature
National Humanities Center
Web site comments and questions, contact: nhc_ed@nationalhumanitiescenter.org
Copyright © 2002 National Humanities Center. All rights reserved.
Revised: January 2002
nationalhumanitiescenter.org