

Civil War, known as Reconstruction, during which the North tried to build an egalitarian society.

Pulitzer Prize winner Eric Foner is recognized as America’s leading expert on the history of the period immediately after the U.S. Like all great works of history, this one informs our understanding of the present as well as the past: knowledge and vigilance are always necessary to secure our basic rights. Again today there are serious political challenges to birthright citizenship, voting rights, due process, and equal protection of the law.

A series of momentous decisions by the Supreme Court narrowed the rights guaranteed in the amendments, while the states actively undermined them. Eric Foner's compact, insightful history traces the arc of these pivotal amendments from their dramatic origins in pre-Civil War mass meetings of African-American "colored citizens" and in Republican party politics to their virtual nullification in the late nineteenth century.

In grafting the principle of equality onto the Constitution, these revolutionary changes marked the second founding of the United States. The federal government, not the states, was charged with enforcement, reversing the priority of the original Constitution and the Bill of Rights. They established the principle of birthright citizenship and guaranteed the privileges and immunities of all citizens. The Reconstruction amendments abolished slavery, guaranteed all persons due process and equal protection of the law, and equipped black men with the right to vote. The Declaration of Independence announced equality as an American ideal, but it took the Civil War and the subsequent adoption of three constitutional amendments to establish that ideal as American law. From the Pulitzer Prize-winning scholar, a timely history of the constitutional changes that built equality into the nation's foundation and how those guarantees have been shaken over time.
