Utvidet returrett til 31. januar 2025

Bøker av Julie Roy Jeffrey

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  • av Julie Roy Jeffrey
    552,-

    By focusing on male leaders of the abolitionist movement, historians have often overlooked the great grassroots army of women who also fought to eliminate slavery. Here, Julie Roy Jeffrey explores the involvement of ordinary women--black and white--in the most significant reform movement prior to the Civil War. She offers a complex and compelling portrait of antebellum women's activism, tracing its changing contours over time. For more than three decades, women raised money, carried petitions, created propaganda, sponsored lecture series, circulated newspapers, supported third-party movements, became public lecturers, and assisted fugitive slaves. Indeed, Jeffrey says, theirs was the day-to-day work that helped to keep abolitionism alive. Drawing from letters, diaries, and institutional records, she uses the words of ordinary women to illuminate the meaning of abolitionism in their lives, the rewards and challenges that their commitment provided, and the anguished personal and public steps that abolitionism sometimes demanded they take. Whatever their position on women's rights, argues Jeffrey, their abolitionist activism was a radical step--one that challenged the political and social status quo as well as conventional gender norms.

  • - A Biography of Narcissa Whitman
    av Julie Roy Jeffrey
    247,-

    Narcissa Whitman was a pioneer missionary who, in 1836, travelled with her husband to Oregon and there sought to convert the Cayuse Indians to Christianity. This biography makes use of Whitman's diary and letters in order to reconstruct her difficult adjustment to mission life.

  • - Antislavery Autobiographies and the Unfinished Work of Emancipation
    av Julie Roy Jeffrey
    552,-

    Explores abolitionist autobiographies in the post - Civil War era. This work illuminates a second, little-noted antislavery struggle as abolitionists in the postwar period attempted to counter the nation's growing inclination to forget why the war was fought, what slavery was really like, and why the abolitionist cause was so important.

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