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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Introduction. Early African American Print Culture 1
-
PART I. Vectors of Movement
- chapter 1. The Print Atlantic: Phillis Wheatley, Ignatius Sancho, and the Cultural Signifi cance of the Book 19
- Chapter 2. The Unfortunates: What the Life Spans of Early Black Books Tell Us About Book History 40
- Chapter 3. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and the Circuits of Abolitionist Poetry 53
- Chapter 4. Early African American Print Culture and the American West 75
-
PART II. Racialization and Identity Production
- Chapter 5. Apprehending Early African American Literary History 93
- Chapter 6. Black Voices, White Print: Racial Practice, Print Publicity, and Order in the Early American Republic 107
- Chapter 7. Slavery, Imprinted: Th e Life and Narrative of William Grimes 127
- Chapter 8. Bottles of Ink and Reams of Paper: Clotel, Racialization, and the Material Culture of Print 140
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PART III. Adaptation, Citation, Deployment
- Chapter 9. Notes from the State of Saint Domingue: Th e Practice of Citation in Clotel 161
- Chapter 10. The Canon in Front of Th em: African American Deployments of “Th e Charge of the Light Brigade” 178
- Chapter 11. Another Long Bridge: Reproduction and Reversion in Hagar’s Daughter 192
- Chapter 12. “Photographs to Answer Our Purposes”: Repre sen ta tions of the Liberian Landscape in Colonization Print Culture 203
- Chapter 13. Networking Uncle Tom’s Cabin; or, Hyper Stowe in Early African American Print Culture 231
-
PART IV. Public Performances
- Chapter 14. The Lyric Public of Les Cenelles 253
- Chapter 15. Imagining a State of Fellow Citizens: Early African American Politics of Publicity in the Black State Conventions 274
- Chapter 16. “Keep It Before the People”: The Pictorialization of American Abolitionism 290
- Chapter 17. John Marrant Blows the French Horn: Print, Per for mance, and the Making of Publics in Early African American Literature 318
- Notes 341
- Contributors 405
- Index 409
- Acknowledgments 421
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Introduction. Early African American Print Culture 1
-
PART I. Vectors of Movement
- chapter 1. The Print Atlantic: Phillis Wheatley, Ignatius Sancho, and the Cultural Signifi cance of the Book 19
- Chapter 2. The Unfortunates: What the Life Spans of Early Black Books Tell Us About Book History 40
- Chapter 3. Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and the Circuits of Abolitionist Poetry 53
- Chapter 4. Early African American Print Culture and the American West 75
-
PART II. Racialization and Identity Production
- Chapter 5. Apprehending Early African American Literary History 93
- Chapter 6. Black Voices, White Print: Racial Practice, Print Publicity, and Order in the Early American Republic 107
- Chapter 7. Slavery, Imprinted: Th e Life and Narrative of William Grimes 127
- Chapter 8. Bottles of Ink and Reams of Paper: Clotel, Racialization, and the Material Culture of Print 140
-
PART III. Adaptation, Citation, Deployment
- Chapter 9. Notes from the State of Saint Domingue: Th e Practice of Citation in Clotel 161
- Chapter 10. The Canon in Front of Th em: African American Deployments of “Th e Charge of the Light Brigade” 178
- Chapter 11. Another Long Bridge: Reproduction and Reversion in Hagar’s Daughter 192
- Chapter 12. “Photographs to Answer Our Purposes”: Repre sen ta tions of the Liberian Landscape in Colonization Print Culture 203
- Chapter 13. Networking Uncle Tom’s Cabin; or, Hyper Stowe in Early African American Print Culture 231
-
PART IV. Public Performances
- Chapter 14. The Lyric Public of Les Cenelles 253
- Chapter 15. Imagining a State of Fellow Citizens: Early African American Politics of Publicity in the Black State Conventions 274
- Chapter 16. “Keep It Before the People”: The Pictorialization of American Abolitionism 290
- Chapter 17. John Marrant Blows the French Horn: Print, Per for mance, and the Making of Publics in Early African American Literature 318
- Notes 341
- Contributors 405
- Index 409
- Acknowledgments 421