Opus Exclusive: James Oakes

Weโ€™re so thrilled that James Oakes will join us for this yearโ€™s virtual Opus & Olives gala. In preparation for the big event, we asked James a few questions to help you get to know him better.

How have the challenges of the past year and a half affected your writing? 

Itโ€™s counter intuitive.  I work at home, and I assumed that being stuck at home would improve my productivity.  But I found the experience so anxiety-inducing that I have not been nearly as productive as I hoped.  At the same time, there have been a lot of big changes in my life in the past year, and they compounded the disruption in my writing.  Finally, having published a book earlier this year, Iโ€™ve been asked to give a bunch of talks and interviews, and thatโ€™s also eaten into my writing timeโ€”though in an enjoyable way.  It feels like all of those distractions are easing up and Iโ€™m starting to get back into a more productive pattern.   

What do you hope people learn or take away from this book? 

Thereโ€™s an orthodoxy out there that the Constitution was a proslavery document.ย  I hope people will come to appreciate that when we say that slavery was a โ€œcompromise,โ€ that means that both the supporters and opponents had to compromise with each other.ย ย Soย the Constitution had both proslavery and antislavery elements, and it was understood that way right from the start.ย  That leads to my second point:ย  there was an antislavery constitutional tradition that developed over several decades and that Abraham Lincoln inherited and adopted that tradition as his own.ย  Finally, I hope readers will appreciate that Lincolnโ€™s policy toward slavery during his presidency was profoundly shaped by that antislavery constitutional tradition.ย 

Tell us something that people might not know about you. 

Hmmmm.  Being a history professor is my day job; it pays the rent.  But at heart Iโ€™m a writer and would prefer to spend all my time researching and writing. 

Tell us what you love about libraries. 

I love libraries.  I love the smell of stacks.  I love the quiet.  I love the idea that I can sit down at a table or in a carrel and work for hours on end without anyone thinking thatโ€™s a problem.  I tend to work in big academic research libraries.  I squirrel myself away in the stacks and work, knowing that at some point Iโ€™m going to have to go find a book or an article and that I can just get up from my seat, walk a few minutes, and find just what I need.  And despite the explosion of digital resources, there are some indispensable resources that only libraries have:  manuscripts, map rooms.  And librarians!  Who know things and know where to find things! 

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