A South-side View of Slavery
Author : Nehemiah Adams
Publisher :
Page : 236 pages
File Size : 20,15 MB
Release : 1854
Category : Slavery
ISBN :
Author : Nehemiah Adams
Publisher :
Page : 236 pages
File Size : 20,15 MB
Release : 1854
Category : Slavery
ISBN :
Author : Nehemiah Adams
Publisher :
Page : 248 pages
File Size : 39,45 MB
Release : 1855
Category : Slavery
ISBN :
Author : Peter Wirzbicki
Publisher : University of Pennsylvania Press
Page : 337 pages
File Size : 31,3 MB
Release : 2021-03-26
Category : History
ISBN : 081229789X
In Fighting for the Higher Law, Peter Wirzbicki explores how important black abolitionists joined famous Transcendentalists to create a political philosophy that fired the radical struggle against American slavery. In the cauldron of the antislavery movement, antislavery activists, such as William C. Nell, Thomas Sidney, and Charlotte Forten, and Transcendentalist intellectuals, including Ralph Waldo Emerson and Henry David Thoreau, developed a "Higher Law" ethos, a unique set of romantic political sensibilities—marked by moral enthusiasms, democratic idealism, and a vision of the self that could judge political questions from "higher" standards of morality and reason. The Transcendentalism that emerges here is not simply the dreamy philosophy of privileged white New Englanders, but a more populist movement, one that encouraged an uncompromising form of politics among a wide range of Northerners, black as well as white, working-class as well as wealthy. Invented to fight slavery, it would influence later labor, feminist, civil rights, and environmentalist activism. African American thinkers and activists have long engaged with American Transcendentalist ideas about "double consciousness," nonconformity, and civil disobedience. When thinkers like Martin Luther King, Jr., or W. E. B. Du Bois invoked Transcendentalist ideas, they were putting to use an intellectual movement that black radicals had participated in since the 1830s.
Author : Daina Ramey Berry
Publisher : Beacon Press
Page : 282 pages
File Size : 29,3 MB
Release : 2017-01-24
Category : History
ISBN : 0807047627
Groundbreaking look at slaves as commodities through every phase of life, from birth to death and beyond, in early America In life and in death, slaves were commodities, their monetary value assigned based on their age, gender, health, and the demands of the market. The Price for Their Pound of Flesh is the first book to explore the economic value of enslaved people through every phase of their lives—including preconception, infancy, childhood, adolescence, adulthood, the senior years, and death—in the early American domestic slave trade. Covering the full “life cycle,” historian Daina Ramey Berry shows the lengths to which enslavers would go to maximize profits and protect their investments. Illuminating “ghost values” or the prices placed on dead enslaved people, Berry explores the little-known domestic cadaver trade and traces the illicit sales of dead bodies to medical schools. This book is the culmination of more than ten years of Berry’s exhaustive research on enslaved values, drawing on data unearthed from sources such as slave-trading records, insurance policies, cemetery records, and life insurance policies. Writing with sensitivity and depth, she resurrects the voices of the enslaved and provides a rare window into enslaved peoples’ experiences and thoughts, revealing how enslaved people recalled and responded to being appraised, bartered, and sold throughout the course of their lives. Reaching out from these pages, they compel the reader to bear witness to their stories, to see them as human beings, not merely commodities. A profoundly humane look at an inhumane institution, The Price for Their Pound of Flesh will have a major impact how we think about slavery, reparations, capitalism, nineteenth-century medical education, and the value of life and death. Winner of the 2018 Hamilton Book Award – from the University Coop (Austin, TX) Winner of the 2018 Society for Historians of the Early American Republic Book Prize (SHEAR) Winner of the 2018 Phillis Wheatley Literary Award, from the Sons and Daughters of the US Middle Passage Finalist for the 2018 Frederick Douglass Book Prize from Yale University’s Gilder Lehrman Center for the Study of Slavery, Resistance, and Abolition
Author : Paula T. Connolly
Publisher : University of Iowa Press
Page : 303 pages
File Size : 16,56 MB
Release : 2013-07
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 1609381777
The first comprehensive study of slavery in children's literature, Slavery in American Children's Literature, 1790-2010 historicizes the ways generations of authors have drawn upon antebellum literature in their own recreations of slavery. Beginning with abolitionist and proslavery views in antebellum children's literature, Connolly examines how successive generations reshaped the genres of the slave narrative, abolitionist texts, and plantation novels to reflect the changing contexts of racial politics in America. As a literary history of how antebellum racial images have been re-created or revised for new generations, Slavery in American Children's Literature ultimately offers a record of the racial mythmaking of the United States from the nation's beginning to the present day. Book jacket.
Author : Larry E. Tise
Publisher : University of Georgia Press
Page : 525 pages
File Size : 29,60 MB
Release : 1990-10-01
Category : History
ISBN : 0820323969
Probing at the very core of the American political consciousness from the colonial period through the early republic, this thorough and unprecedented study by Larry E. Tise suggests that American proslavery thought, far from being an invention of the slave-holding South, had its origins in the crucible of conservative New England. Proslavery rhetoric, Tise shows, came late to the South, where the heritage of Jefferson's ideals was strongest and where, as late as the 1830s, most slaveowners would have agreed that slavery was an evil to be removed as soon as possible. When the rhetoric did come, it was often in the portmanteau of ministers who moved south from New England, and it arrived as part of a full-blown ideology. When the South finally did embrace proslavery, the region was placed not at the periphery of American thought but in its mainstream.
Author : Princeton University. Library
Publisher :
Page : 926 pages
File Size : 28,1 MB
Release : 1884
Category : Catalogs, Subject
ISBN :
Author : Illinois State Library
Publisher :
Page : 536 pages
File Size : 45,85 MB
Release : 1894
Category : Library catalogs
ISBN :
Author : Heather Andrea Williams
Publisher : Univ of North Carolina Press
Page : 265 pages
File Size : 13,90 MB
Release : 2012
Category : History
ISBN : 0807835544
Utilizes narratives, letters, interviews, public records, and diaries to explore the stories of separation of former slave families and their quest for reunification.
Author : Joseph Brummell Earnest
Publisher :
Page : 248 pages
File Size : 41,66 MB
Release : 1914
Category : African Americans
ISBN :