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Bøker i Race in the Atlantic World, 1700-1900-serien

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  • - Gender, Race, and Power in the Revolutionary Atlantic
    av Cassandra Pybus & Kit Candlin
    379,-

    These recovered histories of entrepreneurial women of color from the colonial Caribbean illustrate an environment in which upward social mobility for freedpeople was possible. Through determination and extensive commercial and kinship connections, these women penetrated British life and created success for themselves and future generations.

  • - John Adams, Toussaint Louverture, and Their Atlantic World Alliance
    av Ronald Angelo Johnson
    441,-

    From 1798 to 1801, during the Haitian Revolution, President John Adams and Toussaint Louverture, forged diplomatic relations that empowered white Americans to embrace freedom and independence for people of color in Saint-Domingue, helping to bring forth a new nation: Haiti. This is the first book on the Adams-Louverture alliance.

  • - Marking Social and Racial Structures in Barbados and Jamaica
    av Dawn P. Harris
    822,-

    Uses theories of the body to detail the ways colonial states and their agents appropriated physicality to debase the black body, assert the inviolability of the white body, and demarcate the social boundaries between them.

  • - Free African Americans in the Mid-Atlantic Borderland, 1817-1863
    av Andrew K. Diemer
    391 - 758,-

    Considering Baltimore and Philadelphia as part of a larger, Mid-Atlantic borderland, this book shows that the antebellum effort to secure the rights of American citizenship was central to black politics - it was an effort to exploit the ambiguities of citizenship and negotiate the complex politics in which that concept was determined.

  • - American Abolitionists in Post-Emancipation Jamaica, 1834-1866
    av Gale L. Kenny
    352 - 907,-

    Examines the differing ideas of freedom held by white evangelical abolitionists and freed people in Jamaica, and explores the consequences of their encounter for both American and Jamaican history. The book makes creative use of available sources to unpack assumptions on both sides of this American-Jamaican interaction.

  • - The Long Death of Slavery in the United States, 1777-1865
    av Patrick Rael
    560 - 1 419,-

    Why did it take so long to end slavery in the US, and what did it mean that the nation existed eighty-eight years as a ""house divided against itself""? Rael immerses readers in the mix of social, geographic, economic, and political factors that shaped this unique American experience.

  • - Enslaved and Free Black Women in Maryland
    av Jessica Millward
    441 - 907,-

    Highlights the experiences of enslaved Maryland women who negotiated their own freedom, many of whom have been largely lost to historical records. Based on more than fifteen hundred manumission records, Jessica Millward brings together African American social and gender history to provide a new means of using biography as a historical genre.

  • - Terror, Intimacy, Freedom, and Desire in the Black Transatlantic
    av Lisa Ze Winters
    392,-

    Representations of the free mulatta concubine repeatedly depict the women as defined by their sexual attachment to white men, and offer evidence of the means to their freedom within Atlantic slave societies. Lisa Ze Winters contends that these representations conceal the figure's centrality to the practices and production of diaspora.

  • - Black Women and Colonial Fantasies in Nineteenth-Century France
    av Robin Mitchell
    1 470,-

    Shows how literary and visual depictions of black women helped to shape France's post-revolutionary national identity, particularly in response to the trauma of the French defeat in the Haitian Revolution. The stories of these women reveal a blind spot about race in French national identity that persists in the postcolonial present.

  • - Personal Politics and the Antebellum Black Middle Class
    av Erica L. Ball
    352 - 1 247,-

    In this study of antebellum African American print culture in transnational perspective, Erica L. Ball explores the relationship between antislavery discourse and the emergence of the northern black middle class.

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