From the Revolution to our own time, freedom has been America's
strongest cultural bond and its most perilous fault line, a birthright
for some Americans and a cruel mockery for others. Eric Foner takes
freedom not as a timeless truth but as a value whose meaning and scope
have been contested throughout American history. His sweeping narrative
shows freedom to have been shaped not only in congressional debates and
political treatises but also on plantations and picket lines, in parlors
and bedrooms, by our acknowledged leaders and by former slaves, union
organizers, freedom riders, and women's rights activists.