Gå direkte til innholdet
American Slaves in Victorian England
Spar

American Slaves in Victorian England

Forfatter:
innbundet, 2000
Engelsk

Audrey Fisch’s study examines the circulation within England of the people and ideas of the black Abolitionist campaign. During the 1850s, African-Americans and others active in the campaign to abolish slavery, journeyed to England to present the slave experience and rouse opposition to American slavery. By focusing on Harriet Beecher Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin, an anonymous sequel to that novel, Uncle Tom in England, and John Brown’s Slave Life in Georgia, and the lecture tours of free blacks and ex-slaves, Fisch follows the discourse of American abolitionism as it moved across the Atlantic and was re-shaped by domestic Victorian debates about popular culture and taste, the worker versus the slave, popular education, and working class self-improvement. Despite its popular appeal, she claims, the African-American abolitionist campaign actually re-energised English nationalism. This book will be of interest to students of African-American literature, and nineteenth-century American and English literature.

Undertittel
Abolitionist Politics in Popular Literature and Culture
ISBN
9780521660266
Språk
Engelsk
Vekt
390 gram
Utgivelsesdato
10.2.2000
Antall sider
150