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Commemorating the bicentennial of Frederick Douglass's birthday and
featuring images discovered since its original publication in 2015,
this "tour de force" (Library Journal, starred review) reintroduced
Frederick Douglass to a twenty-first-century audience. From these
pages-which include over 160 photographs of Douglass, as well as
his previously unpublished writings and speeches on visual
aesthetics-we learn that neither Custer nor Twain, nor even Abraham
Lincoln, was the most photographed American of the nineteenth
century. Indeed, it was Frederick Douglass, the
ex-slave-turned-abolitionist, eloquent orator, and seminal writer,
who is canonized here as a leading pioneer in photography and a
prescient theorist who believed in the explosive social power of
what was then just an emerging art form. Featuring: Contributions
from Henry Louis Gates, Jr., and Kenneth B. Morris, Jr. (a direct
Douglass descendent) 160 separate photographs of Douglass-many of
which have never been publicly seen and were long lost to history A
collection of contemporaneous artwork that shows how powerful
Douglass's photographic legacy remains today, over a century after
his death All Douglass's previously unpublished writings and
speeches on visual aesthetics
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