Ebook: Specters of Democracy: Blackness and the Aesthetics of Politics in the Antebellum U.S.
Author: Ivy G. Wilson
- Tags: African American United States Regional Cultural History Criticism Literature Fiction Linguistics Words Language Grammar Reference Studies Specific Demographics Social Sciences Politics Humanities New Used Rental Textbooks Specialty Boutique Anthropology Archaeology Criminology Gay Lesbian Gender Geography Military Political Science Psychology Sociology
- Year: 2011
- Publisher: Oxford University Press
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
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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.
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