Thomas Jefferson and Politics: “A game where principles are the stake”

Thomas Jefferson’s fame as an advocate of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment, equal rights of men, religious freedom, and democracy has been frequently questioned. For many scholars, his racist statements, his scant concern for women’s rights, his apparently unrealistic anti-slavery policies, and...

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Main Author: Ari Helo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: European Association for American Studies 2023-07-01
Series:European Journal of American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/20331
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author Ari Helo
author_facet Ari Helo
author_sort Ari Helo
collection DOAJ
description Thomas Jefferson’s fame as an advocate of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment, equal rights of men, religious freedom, and democracy has been frequently questioned. For many scholars, his racist statements, his scant concern for women’s rights, his apparently unrealistic anti-slavery policies, and his anti-Federalist politics suffice as proof of the very opposite of his reputation. This article argues that politics can be viewed as the centerpiece of Jefferson's worldview, according to which all purposes needed to be brought into compliance, to the effect that one ended up with different politics for advocating democratic institutions, for progressive science, for personal self-development, and for socioeconomic issues, including slavery. The never-ending process of creating policies for bettering American society also gave politics its own character as a moral concept.
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spelling doaj-art-09d17224abbf4ceab92f32bf0f6dd5d52025-01-06T09:08:07ZengEuropean Association for American StudiesEuropean Journal of American Studies1991-93362023-07-0118210.4000/ejas.20331Thomas Jefferson and Politics: “A game where principles are the stake”Ari HeloThomas Jefferson’s fame as an advocate of the eighteenth-century Enlightenment, equal rights of men, religious freedom, and democracy has been frequently questioned. For many scholars, his racist statements, his scant concern for women’s rights, his apparently unrealistic anti-slavery policies, and his anti-Federalist politics suffice as proof of the very opposite of his reputation. This article argues that politics can be viewed as the centerpiece of Jefferson's worldview, according to which all purposes needed to be brought into compliance, to the effect that one ended up with different politics for advocating democratic institutions, for progressive science, for personal self-development, and for socioeconomic issues, including slavery. The never-ending process of creating policies for bettering American society also gave politics its own character as a moral concept.https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/20331politicsracismslaverymoralityThomas Jeffersonthe Enlightenment
spellingShingle Ari Helo
Thomas Jefferson and Politics: “A game where principles are the stake”
European Journal of American Studies
politics
racism
slavery
morality
Thomas Jefferson
the Enlightenment
title Thomas Jefferson and Politics: “A game where principles are the stake”
title_full Thomas Jefferson and Politics: “A game where principles are the stake”
title_fullStr Thomas Jefferson and Politics: “A game where principles are the stake”
title_full_unstemmed Thomas Jefferson and Politics: “A game where principles are the stake”
title_short Thomas Jefferson and Politics: “A game where principles are the stake”
title_sort thomas jefferson and politics a game where principles are the stake
topic politics
racism
slavery
morality
Thomas Jefferson
the Enlightenment
url https://journals.openedition.org/ejas/20331
work_keys_str_mv AT arihelo thomasjeffersonandpoliticsagamewhereprinciplesarethestake