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“Self-Made Men”

An Address Delivered in Carlisle, Pennsylvania, March 1893
  • Frederick Douglass
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The Speeches of Frederick Douglass
This chapter is in the book The Speeches of Frederick Douglass
© Yale University Press, New Haven

© Yale University Press, New Haven

Chapters in this book

  1. Frontmatter i
  2. Contents vii
  3. Illustrations x
  4. Preface xv
  5. Introduction: Frederick Douglass’s Oratory and Political Leadership xix
  6. PART 1: Selected Speeches by Frederick Douglass
  7. “I Have Come to Tell You Something about Slavery” 3
  8. “Temperance and Anti-Slavery” 9
  9. “American Slavery, American Religion, and the Free Church of Scotland” 17
  10. “What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?” 55
  11. “A Nation in the Midst of a Nation” 93
  12. “The Claims of the Negro Ethnologically Considered” 116
  13. “The American Constitution and the Slave” 151
  14. “The Mission of the War” 186
  15. “Sources of Danger to the Republic” 217
  16. “Let the Negro Alone” 247
  17. “We Welcome the Fifteenth Amendment” 267
  18. “Our Composite Nationality” 278
  19. “Which Greeley Are We Voting For?” 304
  20. “Recollections of the Anti-Slavery Conflict” 318
  21. “The Freedmen’s Monument to Abraham Lincoln” 337
  22. “This Decision Has Hum bled the Nation” 356
  23. “ ‘It Moves,’ or the Philosophy of Reform” 374
  24. “I Am a Radical Woman Suffrage Man” 401
  25. “Self-Made Men” 414
  26. “Lessons of the Hour” 454
  27. PART 2: Known Influences on Frederick Douglass’s Oratory
  28. From The Columbian Orator (1817) 501
  29. From “An Address to the Slaves of the United States of America” (1843) 505
  30. “Speech Denouncing Daniel Webster’s Endorsement of the Fugitive Slave Law” (1850) 508
  31. From “Toussaint L’Ouverture” (1863) 513
  32. PART 3: Frederick Douglass on Public Speaking
  33. “Give Us the Facts,” from My Bondage and My Freedom (1855) 519
  34. “One Hundred Conventions” (1843), from Life and Times of Frederick Douglass (1881; 1892) 523
  35. “Letter from the Editor” (1849), from the Rochester North Star 526
  36. “A New Vocation before Me” (1870), from Life and Times 528
  37. “People Want to Be Amused as Well as Instructed” (1871), Letter to James Redpath 533
  38. “Great Is the Miracle of Human Speech” (1891), from the Washington (D.C.) Evening Star 535
  39. PART 4: Contemporary Commentary on Frederick Douglass as an Orator
  40. From “Rhode Island Anti-Slavery Meeting” (1841) 539
  41. “A Leaf from My Scrap Book: Samuel R. Ward and Frederick Douglass” (1849) 541
  42. From “A Colored Man’s Eloquence” (1853) 547
  43. From The Rising Son (1874) 549
  44. “An 1895 Public Letter from Elizabeth Cady Stanton on the Occasion of Frederick Douglass’s Death,” from In Memoriam: Frederick Douglass, ed. Helen Douglass (1897) 552
  45. From American Orators and Oratory (1901) 555
  46. PART 5: Modern Scholarly Criticism of Frederick Douglass as an Orator
  47. From Frederick Douglass: Freedom’s Voice, 1818–1845 559
  48. From Specters of Democracy: Blackness and the Aesthetics of Politics in the Antebellum U.S. 566
  49. From “Fighting for Freedom Again: African American Reform Rhetoric in the Late Nineteenth Century” 571
  50. From The Afro-American Jeremiad: Appeals for Justice in America 579
  51. From “ ‘He Made Us Laugh Some’: Frederick Douglass’s Humor” 584
  52. Chronology of Other Important Speeches and Events in Frederick Douglass’s Life 593
  53. Selected Bibliography 605
  54. Credits 611
  55. Index 613
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