In <i>The Powers of Dignity</i> Nick Bromell unpacks Frederick Douglass's 1867 claim that he had elaborated a political philosophy from his own slave experience. Bromell shows that Douglass devised his philosophy because he found that antebellum Americans' liberal-republican understanding of democracy did not provide a sufficient principled basis on which to fight anti-Black racism. To remedy this deficiency Douglass deployed insights from his distinctively Black experience and developed a <i>Black</i> philosophy of democracy. He began by contesting the founders' racist assumptions about humanity and advancing instead a more robust theory of the human as a collection of human powers. He asserted further that the conscious exercise of those powers is what confirms human dignity and that human rights and democracy come into being as ways to affirm and protect that dignity. Thus by emphasizing the powers and the dignity of all citizens deriving democratic rights from these and promoting a remarkably activist power-oriented model of citizenship Douglass's Black political philosophy aimed to rectify two major failings of US democracy in his time and ours: its complacence and its racism.
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