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Festivals of Freedom - Memory and Meaning in African American Emancipation Celebrations, 1808-1915 (Paperback, Uncensored/ / ed.)
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Festivals of Freedom - Memory and Meaning in African American Emancipation Celebrations, 1808-1915 (Paperback, Uncensored/ / ed.)
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With the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade in 1808, many
African Americans began calling for "a day of publick thanksgiving"
to commemorate this important step toward freedom. During the
ensuing century, black leaders built on this foundation and
constructed a distinctive and vibrant tradition through their
celebrations of the end of slavery in New York State, the British
West Indies, and eventually the United States as a whole. In this
revealing study, Mitch Kachun explores the multiple functions and
contested meanings surrounding African American emancipation
celebrations from the abolition of the slave trade to the fiftieth
anniversary of U.S. emancipation. Excluded from July Fourth and
other American nationalist rituals for most of this period, black
activists used these festivals of freedom to encourage community
building and race uplift. Kachun demonstrates that, even as these
annual rituals helped define African Americans as a people by
fostering a sense of shared history, heritage, and identity, they
were also sites of ambiguity and conflict. Freedom celebrations
served as occasions for debate over black representations in the
public sphere, struggles for group leadership, and contests over
collective memory and its meaning. Based on extensive research in
African American newspapers and oration texts, this book retraces a
vital if, often overlooked, tradition in African American political
culture and addresses important issues about black participation in
the public sphere. By illuminating the origins of black Americans'
public commemorations, it also helps explain why there have been
increasing calls in recent years to make the "Juneteenth"
observance of emancipation an American - not just an African
American - day of commemoration.
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