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To Live an Antislavery Life - Personal Politics and the Antebellum Black Middle Class (Paperback, New)
Loot Price: R792
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To Live an Antislavery Life - Personal Politics and the Antebellum Black Middle Class (Paperback, New)
Series: Race in the Atlantic World, 1700-1900
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In this study of antebellum African American print culture in
transnational perspective, Erica L. Ball explores the relationship
between antislavery discourse and the emergence of the northern
black middle class. Through innovative readings of slave
narratives, sermons, fiction, convention proceedings, and the
advice literature printed in forums like Freedom's Journal, the
North Star, and the Anglo-African Magazine, Ball demonstrates that
black figures such as Susan Paul, Frederick Douglass, and Martin
Delany consistently urged readers to internalize their political
principles and to interpret all their personal ambitions, private
familial roles, and domestic responsibilities in light of the
freedom struggle. Ultimately, they were admonished to embody the
abolitionist agenda by living what the fugitive Samuel Ringgold
Ward called an "antislavery life." Far more than calls for northern
free blacks to engage in what scholars call "the politics of
respectability," African American writers characterized true
antislavery living as an oppositional stance rife with radical
possibilities, a deeply personal politics that required free blacks
to transform themselves into model husbands and wives, mothers and
fathers, self-made men, and transnational freedom fighters in the
mold of revolutionary figures from Haiti to Hungary. In the
process, Ball argues, antebellum black writers crafted a set of
ideals-simultaneously respectable and subversive-for their elite
and aspiring African American readers to embrace in the decades
before the Civil War. Published in association with the Library
Company of Philadelphia's Program in African American History. A
Sarah Mills Hodge Fund Publication.
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