Suggested Topics within your search.
Suggested Topics within your search.
- African Americans 4
- Civil rights
- Emancipation 4
- History 4
- Slaves 4
- Social aspects
- Abolitionists 2
- African American abolitionists 2
- African American authors 2
- African American women 2
- Antislavery movements 2
- Autobiography 2
- Causes 2
- Citizenship 2
- Crimes against 2
- Fugitive slaves 2
- Memory 2
- Political aspects 2
- Race relations 2
- Racism 2
- Rape 2
- Sex role 2
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1
Abolitionists remember antislavery autobiographies & the unfinished work of emancipation /
Published 2008Subjects: An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view
Electronic eBook -
2
Abolitionists remember antislavery autobiographies & the unfinished work of emancipation /
Published 2008Subjects: An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view
Electronic eBook -
3
Terror in the heart of freedom citizenship, sexual violence, and the meaning of race in the postemancipation South /
Published 2009Table of Contents: “…I: A city of refuge: emancipation in Memphis, 1862-1866 -- City streets and other public spaces -- A riot and massacre -- II: A state of mobilization: politics in Arkansas, 1865-1868 -- The capitol and other public spheres == A constitutional convention -- III: A region of terror: violence in the South, 1865-1876 -- Houses, yards, and other domestic domains -- Testifying to violence.…”
An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view
Electronic eBook -
4
Terror in the heart of freedom citizenship, sexual violence, and the meaning of race in the postemancipation South /
Published 2009Table of Contents: “…I: A city of refuge: emancipation in Memphis, 1862-1866 -- City streets and other public spaces -- A riot and massacre -- II: A state of mobilization: politics in Arkansas, 1865-1868 -- The capitol and other public spheres == A constitutional convention -- III: A region of terror: violence in the South, 1865-1876 -- Houses, yards, and other domestic domains -- Testifying to violence.…”
An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view
Electronic eBook