BIBLIOGRAPHY
Consult the standard editions of the works of Sophocles,
Euripides,
Aristophanes, Hobbes, Milton, Hume, Bentham,
Garrison, Emerson,
Thoreau, Tolstoi, and Gandhi. This
bibliography contains the less
well-known historical figures
mentioned in the text, anthologies, and
contemporary arti-
cles and books where
further bibliographical detail is to
be found.
Christian Bay, “Civil Disobedience,” Encyclopedia of the
Social Sciences, ed. David L. Sills, 17
vols. (New York, 1968),
2, 473-87. Hugo Bedau, ed., Civil Disobedience: Theory and
Practice (New York, 1969).
Edward Cary, George William
Curtis (Boston,
1894). Henry Steele Commager, Theodore
Parker: Yankee
Crusader (Boston, 1947; reprint 1960). G. W.
Curtis, Orations and Addresses, Vol. I (New York, 1894).
Martin Duberman, “Black Power in America,” Partisan
Review,
35 (1968), 34-48. James H. Fairchild, Moral Science,
revised ed. (New York, 1892), pp. 172-81. R.
S. Fletcher,
A History of Oberlin College (Oberlin, 1943), I,
207-426.
Abe Fortas, Concerning Dissent and Civil
Disobedience
(New York, 1968). Walter Harding, “Did
Thoreau Invent
the Term 'Civil Disobedience,'” Thoreau Society Bulletin,
No. 103 (1968), 8;
idem, The Variorum Civil Disobedience,
annotated
and with an introduction (New York, 1967).
Martin Luther King, Jr., Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos
or Community?
(New York, 1967). Louis E. Lomax, The
Negro
Revolt (New York, 1962; 1963). Staughton Lynd,
Intellectual Origins of American Radicalism (New
York,
1968); idem, Nonviolence in America: A
Documentary His-
tory
(Indianapolis, 1966). E. H. Madden, Civil
Disobedience
and Moral Law in Nineteenth Century American
Philosophy
(Seattle, 1968). Asa Mahan, Series of articles on “Reform,”
Oberlin Evangelist (1844). Theodore Parker, Speeches,
Addresses and Occasional Sermons, 3
vols. (Boston, 1852);
idem, Additional Speeches,
Addresses and Occasional Ser-
mons,
2 vols. (Boston, 1855). Mulford Q. Sibley, ed., The
Quiet Battle: Writings on the Theory and Practice of Non-
violent Resistance (Garden
City, N.Y., 1963). Charles E.
Silberman, Crisis in
Black and White (New York, 1964).
Howard Zinn, Disobedience and Democracy: Nine Fallacies
on Law and
Order (New York, 1968).
EDWARD H. MADDEN
[See also
Anarchism; Constitutionalism; Democracy;
Free
Will; God; Individualism; Peace;
Protest
Movements;
Revolution.]