Slavery in literature
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Slavery in literature
Name
Slavery in literature
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Incoming Resources
- Subject of30
- Fathers, daughters, and slaves, women writers and French colonial slavery, Doris Y. Kadish
- Trading places, colonization and slavery in eighteenth-century French culture, Madeleine Dobie
- Tintin et Spirou contre les négriers, la BD franco-belge : une littérature antiesclavagiste ?, Philippe Delisle
- Race, slavery, and liberalism in nineteenth-century American literature, Arthur Riss
- Transnational Black Dialogues, Re-Imagining Slavery in the Twenty-First Century, Markus Nehl
- Slaves, masters, and the art of authority in Plautine comedy, Kathleen McCarthy
- Romantic reformers and the antislavery struggle in the Civil War Era, Ethan J. Kytle, California State University, Fresno
- Slavery and the culture of taste, Simon Gikandi
- Characters of blood, black heroism in the transatlantic imagination, Celeste-Marie Bernier
- Reimagining the transatlantic, 1780-1890, Joselyn Almeida-Beveridge
- Esclavages et littérature, représentations francophones, sous la direction de Christiane Chaulet Achour
- Race, citizenship, and law in American literature, by Gregg D. Crane
- Legacies of slavery, comparative perspectives, edited by Maria Suzette Fernandes Dias
- Beyond the slave narrative, politics, sex, and manuscripts in the Haitian revolution, Deborah Jenson
- Colonialism and slavery in performance, theatre and the eighteenth-century French Caribbean, edited by Jeffrey M. Leichman and Karine Bénac-Giroux
- The grateful slave, the emergence of race in eighteenth-century British and American culture, George Boulukos
- Colonialism and race in Luso-Hispanic literature, Jerome C. Branche
- Freedom in a slave society, stories from the antebellum South, Johanna Nicol Shields
- Manhood enslaved, bondmen in eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century New Jersey, Kenneth E. Marshall
- Slaves to sweetness, British and Caribbean literatures of sugar, Carl Plasa
- Reading abolition, the critical reception of Harriet Beecher Stowe and Frederick Douglass, Brian Yothers
- The French Atlantic triangle, literature and culture of the slave trade, Christopher L. Miller
- Arbitrary rule, slavery, tyranny, and the power of life and death, Mary Nyquist
- Whitewashing America, material culture and race in the antebellum imagination, Bridget T. Heneghan
- Neither fugitive nor free, Atlantic slavery, freedom suits, and the legal culture of travel, Edlie L. Wong
- Slaves to Rome, paradigms of empire in Roman culture, Myles Lavan
- Teaching Olaudah Equiano's Narrative, pedagogical strategies and new perspectives, edited by Eric D. Lamore; foreword by Vincent Carretta
- The British slave trade and public memory, Elizabeth Kowaleski Wallace
- Fathers, daughters, and slaves, women writers and French colonial slavery, Doris Y. Kadish
- Gender and race in antebellum popular culture, Sarah N. Roth
Outgoing Resources
- Focus1