Slavery In Alexis De Tocqueville's Democracy In America

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Alexis De Tocqueville painted a portrait of a flourishing democracy within the text, Democracy in America. Tocqueville proposed that equality was one of the fundamental tenets that aided the success of American democracy. He defined equality of conditions as the end of aristocracy: “the noble has fallen on the social ladder, and the commoner has risen; the one descends, the other climbs. Each half century brings them nearer, and soon they are going to touch” (Democracy in America, book, 6). American democracy flourishes because there is an established equality of conditions for all; American democracy enforced the absence of formal rank and the end of births into positions of power while encouraging forms of power that challenged rank and privilege. However, in his analysis, Alexis De Tocqueville recognized the presence of race based inequality and cautioned that the reinforcement of a racial hierarchy could be detrimental to American democracy. Such observations characterize Tocqueville as insightful and …show more content…

In short, Tocqueville finds it difficult to reconcile the practice of slavery, much less the exclusionary treatment towards African Americans, without risk of harming democracy. Tocqueville argued that: “the most dreadful of all the evils that threaten the future of the United States arises from the presence of blacks on its soil” (Democracy, 326). Tocqueville realized how the inequality of conditions would always stem from the presence of African Americans; he observed that whites would always push African Americans onto a lower level of the hierarchy, regardless of whether or not slavery was abolished. Consequently, the inequality of conditions for African Americans is the most dreadful of all the evils that threatens the future of the United States. Something must be done if American democracy is to continue

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