Description |
xxviii, 288 pages : illustrations (some color) ; 32 cm |
Contents |
Part I. The photographs -- Part II. Contemporaneous artwork -- Part III. The photographic legacy -- Part IV. Douglass's writings on photography -- Part V. Catalogue raisonne⁺ѓ -- Epilogue : Frederick Douglass's camera obscura: representing the anti-slave "clothed and in their own form" / Henry Louis Gates, Jr. -- Afterword / Kenneth B. Morris, Jr |
Summary |
"Picturing Frederick Douglass is a work that promises to revolutionize our knowledge of race and photography in nineteenth-century America. Teeming with historical detail, it is filled with surprises, chief among them the fact that neither George Custer nor Walt Whitman, and not even Abraham Lincoln, was the most photographed American of that century. In fact, it was Frederick Douglass (1818-1895) the ex-slave turned leading abolitionist, eloquent orator, and seminal writer whose fiery speeches transformed him into one of the most renowned and popular agitators of his age, "--NoveList |
Notes |
"With an Epilogue by Henry Louis Gates, Jr., and an Afterword by Kenneth B. Morris, Jr."--Jacket |
Bibliography |
Includes bibliographical references (pages 241-251) and index |
Subject |
Douglass, Frederick, 1818-1895.
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Douglass, Frederick, 1818-1895 -- Pictorial works.
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African American abolitionists -- Biography.
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Abolitionists -- United States -- Biography.
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Genre/Form |
Biographies.
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Biography.
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Illustrated works.
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Pictorial works.
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Biographies.
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Illustrated works.
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Author |
Trodd, Zoe, author
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Bernier, Celeste-Marie, author
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Gates, Henry Louis, Jr.
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Morris, Kenneth B., Jr.
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LC no. |
2015020546 |
ISBN |
9780871404688 (hardcover) |
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0871404680 (hardcover) |
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