Specters of Democracy: Blackness and the Aesthetics of Politics in the Antebellum U.S.

0
0

Specters of Democracy examines how figurations of blackness were used to illuminate the fraught relationship between citizenship, equality, and democracy in the antebellum U.S. Through close readings of Frederick Douglass, William Wells Brown, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, and Walt Whitman (on aurality), and Herman Melville, William J. Wilson, and a host of genre painters (on visuality), the book reveals how the difficult tasks of representing African Americans-both enslaved and free-in imaginative expression was part of a larger dilemma concerning representative democracy itself.

Page Count:
247

|

Publication Date:
2011-01-01

English & College Success

English

Ethnic Studies

Community Tags

Similar Books

Life and Times of Frederick Douglass
Sex Role Changes: Technology, Politics, and Policy
Dictionary of Anonymous and Pseudonymous English Literature: v. 8
Mexican and Mexican American farm workers: The California agricultural industry
Beyond China's independent foreign policy: Challenge for the U.S. and its Asian allies
The Political economy of Cameroon (A SAIS study on Africa)
Politics, Projects, and People: Institutional Development in Haiti
The Tiwi of North Australia (Case Studies in Cultural Anthropology)
Romania: 40 years (1944-1984) (The Washington papers)
The Cheyennes: Indians of the Great Plains
Lebanon, the politics of revolving doors (The Washington papers)
The new Russian nationalism (The Washington papers)
The Africans: A reader
The Sino-Vietnamese territorial dispute (The Washington papers)
Sino-Vietnamese Territorial Dispute