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基本説明
This is the first to gather together scholarly essays published from 1965 to the present on the role of African Americans and race in the struggle for equality in the northern states before the Civil War.
Full Description
African-American Activism before the Civil War is the first collection of scholarship on the role of African Americans in the struggle for racial equality in the northern states before the Civil War. Many of these essays are already known as classics in the field, and others are well on their way to becoming definitive in a still-evolving field. Here, in one place for the first time, anchored by a comprehensive, analytical introduction discussing the historiography of antebellum black activism, the best scholarship on this crucial group of African American activists can finally be studied together.
Contents
TABLE OF CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
FOREWORD (By James Brewer Stewart)
INTRODUCTION
Leon F. Litwack, The Emancipation of the Negro Abolitionist
Jane H. Pease; William H. Pease, Black Power — The Debate in 1840
Frederick Cooper, Elevating the Race: The Social Thought of Black Leaders, 1827-1850
Benjamin Quarles, Black History's Antebellum Origins
Emma Jones Lapsansky, 'Since They Got Those Separate Churches': Afro-Americans and Racism in Jacksonian Philadelphia
George A. Levesque, Interpreting Early Black Ideology: A Reappraisal of Historical Consensus
Ernest Allen, Jr., Afro-American Identity: Reflections on the Pre-Civil War Era
James Oliver Horton, Freedom's Yoke: Gender Conventions among Antebellum Free Blacks
James Oakes, The Political Significance of Slave Resistance
Albert J. Raboteau, Ethiopia Shall Soon Stretch Forth Her Hands': Black Destiny in Nineteenth-Century America
James Brewer Stewart, The Emergence of Racial Modernity and the Rise of the White North, 1790-1840
Leslie M. Harris, From Abolitionist Amalgamators to 'Rulers of the Five Points': The Discourse of Interracial Sex and Reform in Antebellum New York City
Patrick Rael, The Market Revolution and Market Values in Antebellum Black Protest Thought
Index



