This chapter explores the ways in which Dutch authors, thespians, and audiences envisioned slave-led resistance through a comparative examination of Nicolaas Simon van Winter's infinitely popular tragedy Monzongo, of de koningklyke slaaf (1774), the anonymously written De verlossing der slaaven door de Franschen (1794), and Johannes Kisselius’ De blanke en de zwarte (1798). If slave-led opposition in the Atlantic was viciously curbed by white officials, militias, or colonial policies, this chapter will demonstrate that dramatists and spectators alike, despite their antislavery beliefs, disparaged nonwhite protesters and thwarted their role as crucial actors both on and off the (political) stage of 1800. This thwarting contrasted sharply wit...
In the 1850s and 1860s, Dutch immigrants in America struggled to square their racial views with the ...
Jonas Ross Kjærgård: “The Profitability of Slavery. Economy and Morals in French Melodrama on the Ha...
Contains fulltext : 94715.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Literature must ...
This chapter explores the ways in which Dutch authors, thespians, and audiences envisioned slave-led...
In the preface to his neoclassical tragedy Monzongo, of de koningklyke slaaf (1774), Nicolaas Simon ...
In the preface to his neoclassical tragedy Monzongo, of de koningklyke slaaf (1774), Nicolaas Simon ...
‘There is no justice for us...’: Van Hogendorp’s abolitionist play Kraspoekol (1800) as a trial agai...
Abstract: One of the puzzling questions about the formal Dutch abolition of the slave-trade in 1814 ...
One of the puzzling questions about the formal Dutch abolition of the slave-trade in 1814 is why a s...
Unlike the German, French, and particularly Anglo-American cases, the Dutch theatrical imaginings of...
In February 1763 one of the largest and longest slave revolts erupted in the Dutch colony of Berbice...
This international analysis of theatrical case studies illustrates the ways that theater was an aren...
Theatre plays in which social abuses are criticised often display striking parallels to the civic co...
abstract: This study explores the eighteenth-century and nineteenth-century German dramatic genre Sk...
This is a text-based dissertation with a historical methodology. It intends to look at the role th...
In the 1850s and 1860s, Dutch immigrants in America struggled to square their racial views with the ...
Jonas Ross Kjærgård: “The Profitability of Slavery. Economy and Morals in French Melodrama on the Ha...
Contains fulltext : 94715.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Literature must ...
This chapter explores the ways in which Dutch authors, thespians, and audiences envisioned slave-led...
In the preface to his neoclassical tragedy Monzongo, of de koningklyke slaaf (1774), Nicolaas Simon ...
In the preface to his neoclassical tragedy Monzongo, of de koningklyke slaaf (1774), Nicolaas Simon ...
‘There is no justice for us...’: Van Hogendorp’s abolitionist play Kraspoekol (1800) as a trial agai...
Abstract: One of the puzzling questions about the formal Dutch abolition of the slave-trade in 1814 ...
One of the puzzling questions about the formal Dutch abolition of the slave-trade in 1814 is why a s...
Unlike the German, French, and particularly Anglo-American cases, the Dutch theatrical imaginings of...
In February 1763 one of the largest and longest slave revolts erupted in the Dutch colony of Berbice...
This international analysis of theatrical case studies illustrates the ways that theater was an aren...
Theatre plays in which social abuses are criticised often display striking parallels to the civic co...
abstract: This study explores the eighteenth-century and nineteenth-century German dramatic genre Sk...
This is a text-based dissertation with a historical methodology. It intends to look at the role th...
In the 1850s and 1860s, Dutch immigrants in America struggled to square their racial views with the ...
Jonas Ross Kjærgård: “The Profitability of Slavery. Economy and Morals in French Melodrama on the Ha...
Contains fulltext : 94715.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)Literature must ...