Book Review: Big Enough To Be Inconsistent: Abraham Lincoln Confronts Slavery And Race (The W. E. B. Du Bois Lectures)
by George M. Fredrickson
Publication Date: Feb 28, 2008
List Price: $21.00
Format: Hardcover, 168 pages
Classification: Nonfiction
ISBN13: 9780674027749
Imprint: Harvard University Press
Publisher: Harvard University Press
Parent Company: Harvard University
Book Reviewed by Thumper
There is a great chance that my review of Big Enough to Be
Inconsistent: Abraham Lincoln Confronts Slavery and Race by
George M. Fredrickson will have more words than the small book
itself. Fredrickson examines the writings of Abraham Lincoln to
discuss Lincoln’s true opinions on African Americans, our
freedom, and the state of slavery. Ordinarily, I would not have
touched this book. For years now, I would get review copies of
books on Lincoln ’ and there are a LOT of books about Lincoln,
EACH YEAR. I would not read them. I am from the school of
thought that took Lincoln at his word when he wrote that if he
could have ended the Civil War without freeing the slaves he
would. Needless to say that fact knocked Lincoln permanently off
that pedestal of devotion and admiration for me. I was mystified
that, even today, many African Americans still hold Lincoln in
such regard. I changed my mind about reading this book after
reading John Meacham’s American Lion: Andrew Jackson in the White House
(excellent book by the way). So, with Illinois suddenly on my
mind because of President Obama, I decided to give ol’ Abe a
chance.
Big Enough to Be Inconsistent is a small book. It is the size of
a college thesis and at times reads like one. Fredrickson does a
good job of maintaining a level of objectivity. It is clear that
one of his purposes in writing the book is to factual state, as
much as humanly possible, what Lincoln truly thought of
African-Americans and slavery, which Fredrickson succeed.
The only major misstep Fredrickson made was that it would have
been beneficial if the actual documents or speeches that Lincoln
made regarding race were included, if not in their entirety, a
major portion of the documents. For example, by the time
Fredrickson began evaluating the Lincoln-Douglass Debates, I had
no idea what was going on. In order for me to have a solid point
of reference, I would have to know the content of the debates.
Fredrickson assumed that I, the reader, already knew or had read
the Lincoln-Douglass debates; which I had not. I could not fully
enjoy or comprehend a few of Frederickson’s points because of my
ignorance.
Big Enough to Be Inconsistent was well worth the read. I learned
quite a bit about Lincoln. For instance, Lincoln believed that
blacks and whites could not live peacefully in this country, so
he was all about freeing the slaves and shipping them off to
their own colony away from the United States. Also Lincoln did
not care for slavery because it took employment away from poor
white people, which his family was. It took Lincoln witnessing
former, runaway slaves becoming soldiers and fighting valiantly
for the Union, only then was Lincoln willing to give blacks
props, interesting stuff to say the least.
I would recommend Big Enough to Be Inconsistent to those who are
well studied in Lincoln. For the Lincoln novice, like me, I
would start somewhere else and then come back to this book when
you have become fully versed in Lincoln.