The course toward freedom pursued by late-nineteenth-century black activists is as ideologically and philosophically complicated as the question of freedom itself. Dynamics of gender, class, race, religion/spirituality, and one's experience with enslavement affected the schematization of the cours
This dissertation traces the evolution of black abolitionism in colonial North America and the Unite...
This article analyses Enlightenment ideas and nation-making practices in the American Civil War and ...
During the Revolutionary Era the natural rights philosophy with its universalist assertion that all ...
Race is perhaps the most devastating social construct of human history. The concept of blackness evo...
This project is charged with the illumination and application of Jacques Ranciere’s theory of the di...
Hegel\u27s dialectic of master and slave in the Phenomenology of Mind portrays a master unable to wi...
Beyond Freedom grew out of a conference organized by David Blight, Gregory Downs, and Jim Downs at t...
After the period of Reconstruction (1865-1877), the social position of Southern Negroes became worse...
Women were active participants in the anti-slavery movement. They made up a large portion of profess...
After historicizing the politics of racial representation in the slave narrative, this article consi...
This Article, a sequel to “Mastery, Slavery and Emancipation,” amplified its claims that slaves conc...
Thomas Jefferson is famous for his advocacy of equal rights of men, religious freedom, and democracy...
The notion of spiritual equality grew from the abolitionist movement - the precursor for the politic...
During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the expansion of humanitarian movements t...
The purpose of this article is to explore how music provided the U.S. plantation-slaves with a space...
This dissertation traces the evolution of black abolitionism in colonial North America and the Unite...
This article analyses Enlightenment ideas and nation-making practices in the American Civil War and ...
During the Revolutionary Era the natural rights philosophy with its universalist assertion that all ...
Race is perhaps the most devastating social construct of human history. The concept of blackness evo...
This project is charged with the illumination and application of Jacques Ranciere’s theory of the di...
Hegel\u27s dialectic of master and slave in the Phenomenology of Mind portrays a master unable to wi...
Beyond Freedom grew out of a conference organized by David Blight, Gregory Downs, and Jim Downs at t...
After the period of Reconstruction (1865-1877), the social position of Southern Negroes became worse...
Women were active participants in the anti-slavery movement. They made up a large portion of profess...
After historicizing the politics of racial representation in the slave narrative, this article consi...
This Article, a sequel to “Mastery, Slavery and Emancipation,” amplified its claims that slaves conc...
Thomas Jefferson is famous for his advocacy of equal rights of men, religious freedom, and democracy...
The notion of spiritual equality grew from the abolitionist movement - the precursor for the politic...
During the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, the expansion of humanitarian movements t...
The purpose of this article is to explore how music provided the U.S. plantation-slaves with a space...
This dissertation traces the evolution of black abolitionism in colonial North America and the Unite...
This article analyses Enlightenment ideas and nation-making practices in the American Civil War and ...
During the Revolutionary Era the natural rights philosophy with its universalist assertion that all ...