William G. Thomas III is the John and Catherine Angle Chair in the Humanities and Professor of History at the University of Nebraska. He is co-founder and was director of the Virginia Center for Digital History at the University of Virginia.
"William Thomas casts a bright light into the period’s darkness. .
. . He reveals a remarkable struggle for freedom, one buoyed at
first by new aspirations in the broader culture and later doomed by
rekindled fears. . . . Valuable and provocative. . . .
Mr. Thomas brings a clear and sensitive eye to the tangled
relationship of black and white Americans in the early 19th
century."—Fergus Bordewich, Wall Street Journal
"Gripping. . . . Profound and prodigiously researched."—Alison L.
LaCroix, Washington Post
Selected as a finalist for the 2021 PROSE Awards, sponsored by the
Association of American Publishers
Finalist for the George Washington Book Award, sponsored by
the Gilder Lehrman Center and Washington College
Winner of the SHEAR Best Book Prize, sponsored by The Society for
Historians of the Early American Republic
Winner of the 2021 Nebraska Book Award, Nonfiction Legal
History category, sponsored by Nebraska Center for the
Book
CHOICE Outstanding Academic Titles 2021
“Here is a strikingly original, eloquent, and humane book on an
inhumane institution. The story restores the names and histories
of people who fought for freedom for generations.”—Edward
Ayers, author of The Thin Light of Freedom: The Civil War and
Emancipation in the Heart of America
“In A Question of Freedom, historian William Thomas brings to light
the truly remarkable and largely forgotten efforts of people held
in bondage to sue for their freedom in the courts of the early
United States. A genuine contribution to the social, legal, and
political history of American slavery, this is a book of great
depth and insight.”—Adam Rothman, historian and curator of the
Georgetown Slavery Archive
“With its vivid narration, revelatory research, careful
contextualization, and bracing honesty, A Question of Freedom
demonstrates that freedom suits were not isolated episodes but
instead a major form of slave resistance, with far-reaching and
ongoing effects in the long freedom struggle. This book is
essential reading for understanding the history of slavery and the
modern debate over reparations.”—Elizabeth R. Varon, author of
Armies of Deliverance: A New History of the Civil War
"William Thomas has produced an important and astonishing chronicle
of the legal battles waged by enslaved people for their own
freedom. Braiding white-knuckle courtroom drama together with a
searing exploration of his own family history, he redefines
slavery’s place in early American law—not an inherent feature, but
a dubious institution whose contradictions were exploited by the
enslaved to protect themselves and their families.”—Yoni Appelbaum,
Senior Editor, The Atlantic
"A Question of Freedom is an essential book that details the
extraordinary efforts of enslaved people to challenge both the
legitimacy and absoluteness of slavery in courts of law. It
is a work of remarkable honesty and humanity that should inform any
conversation on the legacy of slavery. Please read it."—Lauret
Savoy, author of Trace: Memory, History, Race, and the America
Landscape
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