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Yale University Press

Kapitel
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© Yale University Press, New Haven

© Yale University Press, New Haven

Kapitel in diesem Buch

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Illustrations x
  4. Introduction xi
  5. Part I: Context—Then and Today
  6. 1. Declaring Equality: Sisterhood and Slavery 3
  7. 2. Sisterhood, Slavery, and Sovereignty: Transnational Antislavery Work and Women’s Rights Movements in the United States During the Twentieth Century 19
  8. Part II: The Impact of Antislavery on French, German, and British Feminism
  9. 3. How (and Why) the Analogy of Marriage with Slavery Provided the Springboard for Women’s Rights Demands in France, 1640–1848 57 Karen Offen 57
  10. 4. Frauenemancipation and Beyond: The Use of the Concept of Emancipation by Early European Feminists 82
  11. 5. Women’s Mobilization in the Era of Slave Emancipation: Some Anglo-French Comparisons 98
  12. 6. British Abolition and Feminism in Transatlantic Perspective 121
  13. Part III: The Transatlantic Activism of African-American Women Abolitionists
  14. 7. Sarah Forten’s Anti-Slavery Networks 143
  15. 8. Incidents Abroad: Harriet Jacobs and the Transatlantic Movement 158
  16. 9. ‘‘Like Hot Lead to Pour on the Americans . . .’’: Sarah Parker Remond—From Salem, Mass., to the British Isles 173
  17. 10. Literary Transnationalism and Diasporic History: Frances Watkins Harper’s ‘‘Fancy Sketches,’’ 1859–60 189
  18. Part IV: Transatlantic Influences on the Emergence of Women’s Rights in the United States
  19. 11. ‘‘The Throne of My Heart’’: Religion, Oratory, and Transatlantic Community in Angelina Grimké’s Launching of Women’s Rights, 1828–1838 211
  20. 12. The Redemption of a Heretic: Harriet Martineau and Anglo-American Abolitionism 242
  21. 13. ‘‘Seeking a Larger Liberty’’: Remapping First Wave Feminism 266
  22. 14. Ernestine Rose’s Jewish Origins and the Varieties of Euro-American Emancipation in 1848 279
  23. Part V: Transcultural Activism Against Slavery by African-American Women
  24. 15. Writing for True Womanhood: African-American Women’s Writings and the Antislavery Struggle 299
  25. 16. Enacting Emancipation: African American Women Abolitionists at Oberlin College and the Quest for Empowerment, Equality, and Respectability 319
  26. 17. At the Boundaries of Abolitionism, Feminism, and Black Nationalism: The Activism of Mary Ann Shadd Cary 346 346
  27. Contributors 367
  28. Index 369
Heruntergeladen am 10.5.2026 von https://www.degruyterbrill.com/document/doi/10.12987/9780300137866-020/html?lang=de
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