Slavery and Sentiment: The Politics of Feeling in Black Atlantic Antislavery Writing, 1770-1850

Etukansi
UPNE, 2008 - 306 sivua
From the eighteenth century on, appeals to listeners’ and readers’ feelings about the sufferings of slaves were a predominant strategy of abolitionism. This book argues that expressions of feeling in those texts did not just appeal to individual readers’ inclinations to sympathy but rather were inherently political. The authors of these texts made arguments from the social and political ideologies that grounded their moral and social lives.

Levecq examines liberalism and republicanism, the main Anglo-American political ideologies of the period, in the antislavery texts of a range of African-American and Afro-British authors. Disclosing the political content hitherto unexamined in this kind of writing, she shows that while the overall story is one of increased liberalization of ideology on both sides of the Atlantic, the republican ideal persisted, particularly among black authors with transatlantic connections.

Demonstrating that such writers as Phillis Wheatley, Ignatius Sancho, Olaudah Equiano, Frederick Douglass, and Mary Prince were men and women of their times, Levecq provides valuable new insight into the ideological world of black Atlantic writers and puts them, for the first time, on modernity’s political map.
 

Sisältö

Introduction
1
1 Interiority Aesthetics and Antislavery Sentiment
33
2 Trade Sailors National Agency and World Citizenship
84
3 Brotherhood Radicalism and Antislavery
139
4 Blood Bodies and the Antebellum Slave Narrative
190
5 The Case of Frederick Douglass
226
Transnationalism and Black Studies
241
Notes
249
Works Cited
273
Index
293
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CHRISTINE LEVECQ teaches courses in both the Humanities and African Diaspora Studies as an Assistant Professor in the Humanities Department at Kettering University in Flint, Michigan.

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