Clotelle, Or, The Colored Heroine
Author | : William Wells Brown |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 128 |
Release | : 1867 |
Genre | : African American families |
ISBN | : |
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Author | : William Wells Brown |
Publisher | : |
Total Pages | : 128 |
Release | : 1867 |
Genre | : African American families |
ISBN | : |
Author | : William Wells Brown |
Publisher | : Library of Alexandria |
Total Pages | : 193 |
Release | : 2008-01-01 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1465562419 |
Author | : William Wells Brown |
Publisher | : Universal-Publishers |
Total Pages | : 124 |
Release | : 1998 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 9781581128994 |
Clotelle; or the Colored Heroine by William Wells Brown (1814 - 1884) was originally printed by the Press of Geo. C Rand and Avery in 1867. This reproduction is reset line-for-line, page-for-page from a copy in the Negro Collection of the Fisk University Library by Jeffrey Young & Associates.
Author | : William Wells Brown |
Publisher | : ReadHowYouWant.com |
Total Pages | : 234 |
Release | : 2002 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 1427051410 |
Author | : William Wells Brown |
Publisher | : ReadHowYouWant.com |
Total Pages | : 242 |
Release | : 2008-08-15 |
Genre | : |
ISBN | : 1427051445 |
Published in 1867, William Wells Browns Clotelle; or The Colored Heroine confronts racism and Afro-American slavery, which are presented as the foundation of a nation that prides itself on justice and democracy. The events play out in the background of the Civil War. A slave girl, Clotelle, is on a quest to save her daughter, whose father is her previous owner.
Author | : Christine Gerhardt |
Publisher | : Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG |
Total Pages | : 586 |
Release | : 2018-06-11 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 3110481324 |
This handbook offers students and researchers a compact introduction to the nineteenth-century American novel in the light of current debates, theoretical concepts, and critical methodologies. The volume turns to the nineteenth century as a formative era in American literary history, a time that saw both the rise of the novel as a genre, and the emergence of an independent, confident American culture. A broad range of concise essays by European and American scholars demonstrates how some of America‘s most well-known and influential novels responded to and participated in the radical transformations that characterized American culture between the early republic and the age of imperial expansion. Part I consists of 7 systematic essays on key historical and critical frameworks ― including debates aboutrace and citizenship, transnationalism, environmentalism and print culture, as well as sentimentalism, romance and the gothic, realism and naturalism. Part II provides 22 essays on individual novels, each combining an introduction to relevant cultural contexts with a fresh close reading and the discussion of critical perspectives shaped by literary and cultural theory.
Author | : William Wells Brown |
Publisher | : University of Georgia Press |
Total Pages | : 485 |
Release | : 2008 |
Genre | : Social Science |
ISBN | : 0820332232 |
"Brown wrote extensively as a journalist but was also a pioneer in other literary genres. His many groundbreaking works include Clotel, the first African American novel; The Escape: or, A Leap for Freedom, the first published African American play; Three Years in Europe, the first African American European travelogue; and The Negro in the American Rebellion, the first history of African American military service in the Civil War. Brown also wrote one of the most important fugitive slave narratives and a striking array of subsequent self-narratives so inventively shifting in content, form, and textual presentation as to place him second only to Frederick Douglass among nineteenth-century African American autobiographers.".
Author | : William Wells Brown |
Publisher | : Library of America |
Total Pages | : 224 |
Release | : 2018-03-27 |
Genre | : Fiction |
ISBN | : 1598535943 |
Born a slave and kept functionally illiterate until he escaped at age nineteen, William Wells Brown refashioned himself first as an agent of the Underground Railroad and then as an antislavery activist and self-taught orator and author, eventually becoming a foundational figure of African American literature. His most ambitious work, Clotel; or, the President’s Daughter (1853), the first novel written by an African American, purports to be the history of Thomas Jefferson’s black daughters and granddaughters. Dramatizing the victimization of black women under slavery, the novel measures the yawning chasm between America’s founding ideals and the brutal realities of bondage.
Author | : Lydia G. Fash |
Publisher | : University of Virginia Press |
Total Pages | : 399 |
Release | : 2020-03-31 |
Genre | : Literary Criticism |
ISBN | : 081394399X |
Accounts of the rise of American literature often start in the 1850s with a cluster of "great American novels"—Hawthorne’s The Scarlet Letter, Melville’s Moby-Dick and Stowe’s Uncle Tom’s Cabin. But these great works did not spring fully formed from the heads of their creators. All three relied on conventions of short fiction built up during the "culture of beginnings," the three decades following the War of 1812 when public figures glorified the American past and called for a patriotic national literature. Decentering the novel as the favored form of early nineteenth-century national literature, Lydia Fash repositions the sketch and the tale at the center of accounts of American literary history, revealing how cultural forces shaped short fiction that was subsequently mined for these celebrated midcentury novels and for the first novel published by an African American. In the shorter works of writers such as Washington Irving, Catharine Sedgwick, Edgar Allan Poe, and Lydia Maria Child, among others, the aesthetic of brevity enabled the beginning idea of a story to take the outsized importance fitted to the culture of beginnings. Fash argues that these short forms, with their ethnic exclusions and narrative innovations, coached readers on how to think about the United States’ past and the nature of narrative time itself. Combining history, print history, and literary criticism, this book treats short fiction as a vital site for debate over what it meant to be American, thereby offering a new account of the birth of a self-consciously national literary tradition.
Author | : Yoriko Ishida |
Publisher | : Peter Lang |
Total Pages | : 282 |
Release | : 2010 |
Genre | : Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN | : 9781433108754 |
The alleged affair between Thomas Jefferson, the third president of the United States, and his slave Sally Hemings was proven as a fact by DNA analysis in 1998. While many historians continue to deny the affair, some have accepted the love affair between Jefferson and Hemings as fact, and many historical omissions regarding the affair have been revised since the 1998 DNA results. However, the identity and the dignity of the Hemings family, which were previously ignored in the official history, have been restored not only by science but also by literature. This book examines how African American writers have depicted the issues of race, gender, and identity for Sally Hemings and her descendants in modern and postmodern novels.