This symposium will begin on the evening of Thursday, 20 October, with a plenary address by Jack N. Rakove: “John Dickinson, Political Conscience, and the Dilemma of the Moderates.”
The panel discussions scheduled for the following day show the wide range of issues Dickinson addressed and contributions he made:
CommunicationAnd that doesn’t even get into the man’s songwriting.Matters of State
- Jelte Olthof, “John Dickinson: Pluralist and Orator”
- Helena Yoo, “Letters from Before He Became a Farmer: John Dickinson’s Transatlantic Correspondence”
- David Forte, “‘Like Lightening thro the Land’: John Dickinson and the Freedom of the Press”
Social Justice
- Charlotte Crane, “Contribution and Representation: John Dickinson’s Contributions to the Fiscal Design of the Emerging Federal Government”
- Charles Fithian, “‘A System, concise, easy and efficient’: John Dickinson’s Version of von Steuben’s Regulations for the Delaware Militia, 1782”
- Nathan R. Kozuskanich, “‘A Certain Coldness in my Presbyterian Friends’: Dickinson and the Pennsylvania Radicals”
Gender and Social Concerns
- Jon Kershner, “‘Nature Planted Them in this Land’: John Dickinson’s Quakerly Diplomacy and Indian Concerns”
- Kevin Bendesky, “‘Defending the Innocent & redressing the injurd’: The Criminal Jurisprudence and Penology of John Dickinson”
- Jane E. Calvert, “Black Freedom and Its Limits in the Thought of John Dickinson”
- James Emmett Ryan, “John Dickinson and Public Education”
- Rebecca Brannon, “John Dickinson and Aging”
- Nathaniel Green, “‘From a Common Stock of Rights’: Human Rights and Political Power in John Dickinson’s America”
Two years ago, after the very first volume of Dickinson’s collected writings appeared, the Library Company of Philadelphia hosted a smaller, online event. But of course late 2020 was a time for online events. This symposium is the first time these scholars will be gathered in the same place.
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