Subject |
African Americans -- History -- Sources.
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African American orators.
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Speeches, addresses, etc., American -- African American authors.
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Descript |
1 online resource (xxxix, 645 pages) : illustrations |
Content |
text txt |
Media |
computer c |
Carrier |
online resource cr |
Contents |
"I Have Come to Tell You Something about Slavery" (1841) -- "Temperance and Anti-Slavery" (1846) -- "American Slavery, American Religion, and the Free Church of Scotland" (1846) -- "What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July?" (1852) -- "A Nation in the Midst of a Nation" (1853) -- "The Claims of the Negro Ethnologically Considered" (1854) -- "The American Constitution and the Slave" (1860) -- "The Mission of the War" (1864) -- "Sources of Danger to the Republic" (1867) -- "Let the Negro Alone" (1869) -- "We Welcome the Fifteenth Amendment" (1869) -- "Our Composite Nationality" (1869) -- "Which Greeley Are We Voting For?" (1872) -- "Recollections of the Anti-Slavery Conflict" (1873) -- "The Freedmen's Monument to Abraham Lincoln" (1876) -- "This Decision Has Humbled the Nation" (1883) -- " 'It Moves, ' or the Philosophy of Reform" (1883) -- "I Am a Radical Woman Suffrage Man" (1888) -- "Self-Made Men" (1893) -- "Lessons of the Hour" (1894) -- Caleb Bingham, from The Columbian Orator (1817) -- Henry Highland Garnet, from "An Address to the Slaves of the United States of America" (1843) -- Samuel Ringgold Ward, "Speech Denouncing Daniel Webster's Endorsement of the Fugitive Slave Law" (1850) -- Wendell Phillips, from "Toussaint L'Ouverture" (1863) -- Frederick Douglass, "Give Us the Facts," from My Bondage and My Freedom (1855) -- Frederick Douglass, "One Hundred Conventions" (1843), from Life and Times of Frederick Douglass (1881; 1892) -- Frederick Douglass, "Letter from the Editor" (1849), from the Rochester North Star -- Frederick Douglass, "A New Vocation before Me" (1870), from Life and Times -- Frederick Douglass, "People Want to Be Amused as Well as Instructed" (1871), Letter to James Redpath -- Frederick Douglass, "Great Is the Miracle of Human Speech" (1891), from the Washington (D.C.) Evening Star -- Nathaniel Peabody Rogers, from "Rhode Island Anti-Slavery Meeting" (1841) -- William J. Wilson, "A Leaf from My Scrap Book: Samuel R. Ward and Frederick Douglass" (1849) -- Thurlow G. Weed, from "A Colored Man's Eloquence" (1853) -- William Wells Brown, from The Rising Son (1874) -- Elizabeth Cady Stanton, "An 1895 Public Letter from Elizabeth Cady Stanton on the Occasion of Frederick Douglass's Death," from In Memoriam: Frederick Douglass, ed. Helen Douglass (1897) -- Thomas Wentworth Higginson, from American Orators and Oratory (1901) -- Gregory P. Lampe, from Frederick Douglass: Freedom's Voice, 1818-1845 -- Ivy G. Wilson, from Specters of Democracy: Blackness and the Aesthetics of Politics in the Antebellum U.S. -- Richard W. Leeman, from "Fighting for Freedom Again: African American Reform Rhetoric in the Late Nineteenth Century" -- David Howard-Pitney, from the Afro-American Jeremiad: Appeals for Justice in America -- Granville Ganter, from "'He Made Us Laugh Some': Frederick Doublass's Humor" -- Chronology of other important speeches and events in Frederick Douglass's life. |
Note |
Unlimited number of concurrent users. UkHlHU |
Alt author |
McKivigan, John R., 1949- editor.
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Husband, Julie, editor.
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Kaufman, Heather L., 1969- editor.
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ISBN |
9780300240696 (electronic bk.) |
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0300240694 (electronic bk.) |
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