*Frontmatter, pg. i*Contents, pg. v*Introduction, pg. vii*1. Slavery and Sin: The Cultural Background, pg. 3*2. Who Was an Abolitionist?, pg. 32*3. Who Defends the Abolitionist?, pg. 52*4. Orange Scott: The Methodist Evangelist as Revolutionary, pg. 71*5. The Persistence of Wendell Phillips, pg. 102*6. Abolition's Different Drummer: Frederick Douglass, pg. 123*7. The Emancipation of the Negro Abolitionist, pg. 137*8. A Brief for Equality: The Abolitionist Reply to the Racist Myth, 1860-1865, pg. 156*9. "Iconoclasm Has Had Its Day": Abolitionists and Freedmen in South Carolina, pg. 178*10. The Abolitionist Critique of the United States Constitution, pg. 209*11. Antislavery and Utopia, pg. 240*12. The Psychology of Commitment: The Constructive Role of Violence and Suffering for the Individual and for His Society, pg. 270*13. "A Sacred Animosity": Abolitionism in Canada, pg. 301*14. The British and American Abolitionists Compared, pg. 343*15. Ambiguities in the Antislavery Crusade of the Republican Party, pg. 362*16. The Northern Response to Slavery, pg. 395*17. Abolitionists, Freedom-Riders, and the Tactics of Agitation, pg. 417*Index, pg. 453