For the past twenty years, historians have recognized the role that \u271\u27 women played in the nineteenth-century abolitionist movement. Works by Gerda Lerner, Nancy Hewitt,jean Fagan Yellin, Clare Taylor, and Maria Diedrich, among others, have demonstrated that women spoke, organized, promoted, and wrote on behalf of the movement to end slavery. Yet, the published volumes of the Frederick Douglass Papers have obscured that fact. Although women supported and often saved Douglass throughout his career, their voices have been conspicuously absent from the seven volumes of the Douglass Papers. With the impending publication of the first correspondence volume, which covers the years 1842-52, the project can correct this oversight by emphasiz...
African-American slave autobiographies, commonly known as slave narratives, reflect the soul and spi...
Frederick Douglass was the leading spokesman of American Negroes in the 1800s. Born a slave, Douglas...
Mary Easton Sibley, the founder of Lindenwood University, was an ambitious woman. A supporter of the...
Harriet Ann Jacobs’ Incidents in the life of a Slave Girl (1861) and Frederick Douglass’ Narrative o...
Frederick Douglass through the Eyes of His Contemporaries With Douglass in His Own Time, editor and ...
Title: Collection, 1874-1943 Description: 6 linear ft. Notes: Abolitionist, journalist, diplomat, an...
Kayla Hardy-Butler presents a famous letter by Frederick Douglass, as it was published in Ohio, with...
In the 19th century, voices for social reform reached a high pitch—both figuratively and literally. ...
Women were active participants in the anti-slavery movement. They made up a large portion of profess...
Scholars correctly appreciate Frederick Douglass’s novella The Heroic Slave (1853) as an important e...
Abolitionism\u27s Allure Nilgün Anadolu-Okur, a scholar of African American literature at Temple Uni...
In February 2015, the Frederick Douglass Papers, a documentary editing project at work since 1973 to...
t is the design of this project to suggest that Frederick Douglass\u27 novella, The Heroic Slave, ...
Harriet Ann Jacobs is now known as the author of Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Written by H...
Rereading Frederick Douglass In The Lives of Frederick Douglass, Robert S. Levine studies Frederick ...
African-American slave autobiographies, commonly known as slave narratives, reflect the soul and spi...
Frederick Douglass was the leading spokesman of American Negroes in the 1800s. Born a slave, Douglas...
Mary Easton Sibley, the founder of Lindenwood University, was an ambitious woman. A supporter of the...
Harriet Ann Jacobs’ Incidents in the life of a Slave Girl (1861) and Frederick Douglass’ Narrative o...
Frederick Douglass through the Eyes of His Contemporaries With Douglass in His Own Time, editor and ...
Title: Collection, 1874-1943 Description: 6 linear ft. Notes: Abolitionist, journalist, diplomat, an...
Kayla Hardy-Butler presents a famous letter by Frederick Douglass, as it was published in Ohio, with...
In the 19th century, voices for social reform reached a high pitch—both figuratively and literally. ...
Women were active participants in the anti-slavery movement. They made up a large portion of profess...
Scholars correctly appreciate Frederick Douglass’s novella The Heroic Slave (1853) as an important e...
Abolitionism\u27s Allure Nilgün Anadolu-Okur, a scholar of African American literature at Temple Uni...
In February 2015, the Frederick Douglass Papers, a documentary editing project at work since 1973 to...
t is the design of this project to suggest that Frederick Douglass\u27 novella, The Heroic Slave, ...
Harriet Ann Jacobs is now known as the author of Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Written by H...
Rereading Frederick Douglass In The Lives of Frederick Douglass, Robert S. Levine studies Frederick ...
African-American slave autobiographies, commonly known as slave narratives, reflect the soul and spi...
Frederick Douglass was the leading spokesman of American Negroes in the 1800s. Born a slave, Douglas...
Mary Easton Sibley, the founder of Lindenwood University, was an ambitious woman. A supporter of the...