Description |
1 online resource |
Series |
Race in the Atlantic world, 1700-1900 |
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Race in the Atlantic world, 1700-1900.
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Contents |
Prologue / James Sidbury -- Introduction / Ronald Angelo Johnson and Ousmane K. Power-Greene -- North America -- On the edge of freedom : the reenslavement of Elizabeth Watson in Nova Scotia / Franco Paz and Harvey Amani Whitfield -- A scheme to desert : the Louisiana Purchase and freedom seekers in the Louisiana-Texas borderlands, 1804-1806 / Mekala Audain -- Looking for freedom in the borderlands : U.S. black refugees from slavery in Early Independent Mexico, 1821-1836 / Thomas Mareite -- Africa -- The international migration of South Carolinian free people of color, 1780-1865 / Lawrence Aje -- Liberia as a theater : performance, race-making, and the Liberian nationality / Caree A. Banton -- The making of a Pan-Africanist : George Henry Jackson and the Lukunga Mission in the Congo Free State / Marcus Bruce -- Caribbean -- The British emigration scheme and the African American emigration movement to the Caribbean / Dexter J. Gabriel -- A reinterpretation of African Americans and Haitian emigration / Brandon R. Byrd -- Frederick Douglass and debates over the annexation of the Dominican Republic / Claire Bourhuis-Mariotti -- Europe -- African American women in Europe / Pia Wiegmink -- Black abolitionists in Ireland and the challenge of universal reform / Angela F. Murphy -- Epilogue / Gerald Horns |
Summary |
"In Search of Liberty engages ways in which African Americans, since the founding of the United States, have understood their struggle for freedom and liberty as a feature of changes within the Atlantic world. The essays in this volume capture how African Americans grappled with those questions, as the struggle for liberty in the United States continued through the end of the nineteenth century, when new regimes of power implemented systems of racial oppression that truncated what the historian Hasan Kwame Jeffries calls "Freedom Rights" for freedmen and women after the passing of the Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments. This book charts the diverse ways in which African Americans utilized the Atlantic world in search of the ideals of liberty that they were denied at home. Black internationalism included emigration abroad, lecture tours in Europe denouncing slavery, and missionary activity in King Leopold's Congo, illustrating an international consciousness among black Americans. In Search of Liberty is the only edited collection on Black Internationalism during the nineteenth century. The contributors represented in this volume come from diverse localities, scholarly interest and backgrounds. By breaking from the imposition of traditional periodization, this book shows how black freedom struggles in the US are rooted in a Pan-African identity prior to the movements of the 20th century"-- Provided by publisher |
Subject |
African Americans -- History -- 19th century
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African Americans -- Foreign countries -- History
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Free Black people -- America -- History -- 19th century
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Antislavery movements -- History -- 19th century
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Internationalism -- History -- 19th century
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African diaspora.
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African Americans
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African diaspora
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Antislavery movements
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Free Black people
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Internationalism
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Race relations -- Political aspects
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SUBJECT |
United States -- Race relations -- Political aspects -- History -- 19th century
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Subject |
America
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United States
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Genre/Form |
History
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Form |
Electronic book
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Author |
Johnson, Ronald Angelo, 1970- editor.
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Power-Greene, Ousmane K., editor.
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ISBN |
9780820360096 |
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0820360090 |
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