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            Authors to speak at Lincoln Presidential Museum 3 authors 
			coming in July and August to discuss Civil War laws, Abraham Lincoln 
			and 'Battle Hymn of the Republic' 
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            [July 09, 2013] 
            SPRINGFIELD -- Three authors are 
			bringing new perspectives on the Civil War, from morality to music 
			to legislation, to the Abraham Lincoln Presidential Library and 
			Museum in a series of free events this summer. | 
		
            |  All three will sign copies of their books, speak at the library and 
			take questions from the audience. The summer series begins July 16 
			with Thomas Mackey discussing laws that contributed to the Civil War 
			or emerged from it. They range from local measures, such as the 
			abolition of slavery in Washington, D.C., to major national changes 
			like the 14th Amendment, which established new rights of due process 
			and equal protection. Mackey, a law professor at the University of Louisville, has 
			written "A Documentary History of the Civil War Era: Volume 1, 
			Legislative Achievements." 
			 On July 24, John Burt visits to discuss "Lincoln's Tragic 
			Pragmatism: Lincoln, Douglas, and Moral Conflict," which the New 
			York Times calls "a work that every serious student of Lincoln will 
			have to read." It presents a new interpretation of the 
			Lincoln-Douglas debates by exploring Douglas' fundamental principle 
			that war must be avoided, even if it meant expanding slavery, and 
			Lincoln's principle that slavery must be contained and, in the long 
			run, abolished. Burt, a poet and literature professor at Brandeis University, 
			spent 26 years writing the book. He presents an unusually nuanced 
			view of Stephen Douglas' position that the future of slavery should 
			be decided by popular vote.  
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			 The series of author appearances wraps up Aug. 22 with John 
			Stauffer, co-author of "Battle Hymn of the Republic: A Biography of 
			the Song That Marches On." The book traces the song from revival 
			meetings to battlefields to protest marches. Civil rights historian 
			David Blight says, "Through the story of a song, surprised readers 
			will learn a great deal about what binds as well as divides 
			Americans."  Stauffer, a professor of literature and African-American studies 
			at Harvard, has also written books on radical abolitionists and the 
			parallel lives of Lincoln and Frederick Douglass. The events begin with book signings at 6 p.m., followed by the 
			speech at 6:30. Tickets are free but must be reserved in advance. 
			Visit 
			www.presidentlincoln.illinois.gov and click on "Special 
			event tickets and reservations." 
            [Text from file received from the 
			Illinois Historic Preservation Agency] 
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