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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 July 2023
This review essay considers Alejandro de la Fuente and Ariela J. Gross’s Becoming Free, Becoming Black (2020); Laura F. Edwards’s The People and Their Peace (2009); Ariela J. Gross’s Double Character ([2000] 2006); Martha S. Jones’s Birthright Citizens (2018); Kelly M. Kennington’s In the Shadow of Dred Scott (2017); and Kimberly M. Welch’s Black Litigants in the Antebellum South (2018), arguing that one important implication of these works is that the roots of post-Reconstruction Black legal culture can be found during the antebellum period. The essay synthesizes the insights of these works regarding legal culture, legal consciousness, vernacular legal education, and legal networking. It concludes that, for students of Black legal culture and litigation for and by Black people beyond Reconstruction (that is, Jim Crow), examining the historiography of antebellum litigation for and by Black people is an important starting point in advanced discussions about Black legal culture.
I would like to acknowledge the William Nelson Cromwell Foundation, the American Society for Legal History, the J. Williard Hurst Summer Institute, Mitra Sharafi, Sarah Barringer Gordon, Reuel Schiller, Karen Tani, Regina Austin, Tomiko Brown-Nagin, Tiya Miles, Emma Rothschild, and my fall 2022 African American Studies 184x class for the ways in which they have contributed to this review essay coming to fruition. Special thanks to Dylan Penningroth and Kimberly Welch for their insights as I fine-tuned this essay.