Book Description
Reproduction of the original: Official Report of the Niger Valley Exploring Party by Martin R. Delany
Author : Martin R. Delany
Publisher : BoD – Books on Demand
Page : 122 pages
File Size : 40,45 MB
Release : 2020-07-17
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 3752315903
Reproduction of the original: Official Report of the Niger Valley Exploring Party by Martin R. Delany
Author : Martin R. Delany
Publisher : BoD – Books on Demand
Page : 122 pages
File Size : 41,42 MB
Release : 2020-07-30
Category : Fiction
ISBN : 3752370246
Reproduction of the original: Official Report of the Niger Valley Exploring Party by Martin R. Delany
Author : William Edward Burghardt Du Bois
Publisher :
Page : 1796 pages
File Size : 26,50 MB
Release : 1924
Category : African Americans
ISBN :
Author : Ikuko Asaka
Publisher : Duke University Press
Page : 292 pages
File Size : 10,88 MB
Release : 2017-10-19
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0822372754
In Tropical Freedom Ikuko Asaka engages in a hemispheric examination of the intersection of emancipation and settler colonialism in North America. Asaka shows how from the late eighteenth century through Reconstruction, emancipation efforts in the United States and present-day Canada were accompanied by attempts to relocate freed blacks to tropical regions, as black bodies were deemed to be more physiologically compatible with tropical climates. This logic conceived of freedom as a racially segregated condition based upon geography and climate. Regardless of whether freed people became tenant farmers in Sierra Leone or plantation laborers throughout the Caribbean, their relocation would provide whites with a monopoly over the benefits of settling indigenous land in temperate zones throughout North America. At the same time, black activists and intellectuals contested these geographic-based controls by developing alternative discourses on race and the environment. By tracing these negotiations of the transnational racialization of freedom, Asaka demonstrates the importance of considering settler colonialism and black freedom together while complicating the prevailing frames through which the intertwined histories of British and U.S. emancipation and colonialism have been understood.
Author : Martin Kilson
Publisher : Routledge
Page : 416 pages
File Size : 45,33 MB
Release : 2013-10-28
Category : History
ISBN : 1136253092
First published in 1969. This is part of a series that comprises reprints as well as original works on various aspects of African life- history, institutions, culture, political and social thought, and eminent African personalities. As 'Africana' in the title indicates, the term 'African' is used liberally and includes persons of African descent in the New World whose life and work are clearly and deeply identified with Africa. The reprints are in most part landmarks of African writing and each will contain a new introduction placing the author's life, ideas and activities in perspective.
Author : Arwen P. Mohun
Publisher : University of Chicago Press
Page : 329 pages
File Size : 26,15 MB
Release : 2023-11-16
Category : History
ISBN : 0226828204
This biography of “African explorer” Richard Dorsey Mohun, written by one of his descendants, reveals how American greed and state power helped shape the new imperial order in Africa. Richard Dorsey Mohun spent his career circulating among the eastern United States, the cities and courts of Europe, and the African continent, as he served the US State Department at some points and King Leopold of Belgium at others. A freelance imperialist, he implemented the schemes of American investors and the Congo Free State alike. Without men like him, Africa’s history might have unfolded very differently. How did an ordinary son of a Washington bookseller become the agent of American corporate greed and European imperial ambition? Why did he choose to act in ways that ranged from thoughtless and amoral to criminal and unforgivable? With unblinking clarity and precision, historian Arwen P. Mohun interrogates the life and actions of her great-grandfather in American Imperialist. She seeks not to excuse the man known as Dorsey but to understand how individual ambition and imperial lust fueled each other, to catastrophic ends. Ultimately, she offers a nuanced portrait of how her great-grandfather’s pursuit of career success and financial security for his family came at a tragic cost to countless Africans.
Author : Patrick Rael
Publisher : Univ of North Carolina Press
Page : 436 pages
File Size : 48,65 MB
Release : 2003-01-14
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 0807875031
Frederick Douglass, Sojourner Truth, Martin Delany--these figures stand out in the annals of black protest for their vital antislavery efforts. But what of the rest of their generation, the thousands of other free blacks in the North? Patrick Rael explores the tradition of protest and sense of racial identity forged by both famous and lesser-known black leaders in antebellum America and illuminates the ideas that united these activists across a wide array of divisions. In so doing, he reveals the roots of the arguments that still resound in the struggle for justice today. Mining sources that include newspapers and pamphlets of the black national press, speeches and sermons, slave narratives and personal memoirs, Rael recovers the voices of an extraordinary range of black leaders in the first half of the nineteenth century. He traces how these activists constructed a black American identity through their participation in the discourse of the public sphere and how this identity in turn informed their critiques of a nation predicated on freedom but devoted to white supremacy. His analysis explains how their place in the industrializing, urbanizing antebellum North offered black leaders a unique opportunity to smooth over class and other tensions among themselves and successfully galvanize the race against slavery.
Author : Teresa Zackodnik
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 707 pages
File Size : 41,63 MB
Release : 2021-05-13
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 110869019X
The period of 1850-1865 consisted of violent struggle and crisis as the United States underwent the prodigious transition from slaveholding to ostensibly 'free' nation. This volume reframes mid-century African American literature and challenges our current understandings of both African American and American literature. It presents a fluid tradition that includes history, science, politics, economics, space and movement, the visual, and the sonic. Black writing was highly conscious of transnational and international politics, textual circulation, and revolutionary imaginaries. Chapters explore how Black literature was being produced and circulated; how and why it marked its relation to other literary and expressive traditions; what geopolitical imaginaries it facilitated through representation; and what technologies, including print, enabled African Americans to pursue such a complex and ongoing aesthetic and political project.
Author : Emma J. Lapsansky-Werner
Publisher : Penn State Press
Page : 402 pages
File Size : 23,75 MB
Release : 2010-11-01
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 027104571X
Author : C. Peter Ripley
Publisher : UNC Press Books
Page : 640 pages
File Size : 49,31 MB
Release : 2000-11-09
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN :
This five-volume documentary collection--culled from an international archival search that turned up over 14,000 letters, speeches, pamphlets, essays, and newspaper editorials--reveals how black abolitionists represented the core of the antislavery movement. While the first two volumes consider black abolitionists in the British Isles and Canada (the home of some 60,000 black Americans on the eve of the Civil War), the remaining volumes examine the activities and opinions of black abolitionists in the United States from 1830 until the end of the Civil War. In particular, these volumes focus on their reactions to African colonization and the idea of gradual emancipation, the Fugitive Slave Law, and the promise brought by emancipation during the war.