East Baton Rouge Parish Library

Freedom's seekers, essays on comparative emancipation, Jeffrey R. Kerr-Ritchie

Label
Freedom's seekers, essays on comparative emancipation, Jeffrey R. Kerr-Ritchie
Language
eng
Bibliography note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 163-222) and index
resource.governmentPublication
government publication of a state province territory dependency etc
Index
index present
Literary Form
non fiction
Main title
Freedom's seekers
Nature of contents
bibliography
Oclc number
861678078
Responsibility statement
Jeffrey R. Kerr-Ritchie
Series statement
Antislavery, abolition, and the Atlantic world
Sub title
essays on comparative emancipation
Summary
Jeffrey R. Kerr-Ritchie's Freedom's Seekers offers a bold and innovative intervention into the study of emancipation as a transnational phenomenon and serves as an important contribution to our understanding of the remaking of the nineteenth-century Atlantic Americas. Drawing on decades of research into slave and emancipation societies, Kerr-Ritchie is attentive to those who sought but were not granted freedom, and those who resisted enslavement individually as well as collectively on behalf of their communities. He explores the many roles that fugitive slaves, slave soldiers, and slave rebels played in their own societies. He likewise explicates the lives of individual freedmen, freedwomen, and freed children to show how the first free-born generation helped to shape the terms and conditions of the post-slavery world. Freedom's Seekers is a signal contribution to African Diaspora studies, especially in its rigorous respect for the agency of those who sought and then fought for their freedom, and its consistent attention to the transnational dimensions of emancipation
Table Of Contents
Introduction : was U.S. emancipation exceptional? -- Self-emancipators across North America -- Slave soldiers -- Slave revolt across borders -- Samuel Ward and the making of an imperial subject -- Freedwomen and freed children -- Freedom's first generation -- Epilogue : freedom's seekers today
Classification
Content
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