Bültmann & Gerriets
Writing History from the Margins
African Americans and the Quest for Freedom
von Claire Parfait, Hélène Le Dantec-Lowry, Claire Bourhis-Mariotti
Verlag: Taylor & Francis
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ISBN: 978-1-317-19568-9
Erschienen am 13.09.2016
Sprache: Englisch
Umfang: 174 Seiten

Preis: 50,49 €

Klappentext
Biografische Anmerkung
Inhaltsverzeichnis

With contributions from leading American and European scholars, this collection of original essays surveys the actors and the modes of writing history from the "margins" of society, focusing specifically on African Americans.

Nearly 100 years after The Journal of Negro History was founded, this book assesses the legacy of the African American historians, mostly amateur historians initially, who wrote the history of their community between the 1830s and World War II. Subsequently, the growth of the civil rights movement further changed historical paradigms--and the place of African Americans and that of black writers in publishing and in the historical profession. Through slavery and segregation, self-educated and formally educated Blacks wrote works of history, often in order to inscribe African Americans within the main historical narrative of the nation, with a two-fold objective: to make African Americans proud of their past and to enable them to fight against white prejudice.

Over the past decade, historians have turned to the study of these pioneers, but a number of issues remain to be considered. This anthology will contribute to answering several key questions concerning who published these books, and how were they distributed, read, and received. Little has been written concerning what they reveal about the construction of professional history in the nineteenth century when examined in relation to other writings by Euro-Americans working in an academic setting or as independent researchers.



Claire Parfait is Professor of American Studies and Book History at Université Paris 13. She has authored The Publishing History of Uncle Tom's Cabin, 1852-2002 (Ashgate, 2007) and, in collaboration with Marie-Jeanne Rossignol, an annotated translation of William Wells Brown's Narrative of William Wells Brown, A Fugitive Slave, Written by Himself (1847) (PURH, 2012). She is principal investigator of the three-year Sorbonne Paris Cité project "Writing History from the Margins: the Case of African Americans" (http://hdlm.hypotheses.org/).


Hélène Le Dantec-Lowry is a Professor of American Studies at Université Sorbonne Nouvelle (Paris, France), where she directs the Center for Research on North American History (CRAN). She is also editor-in-chief for history of the French journal of American studies (RFEA). She has published on the African American family, the civil rights movement, black domestics, and material culture, including women's cookbooks. Her most recent book, coedited with Ambre Ivol, is entitled Generations of Social Movements: Memory and the Left in the US and France (Routledge, 2015).


Claire Bourhis-Mariotti is an Associate Professor of American History at Université Paris 8. She has authored L'union fait la force. Les Noirs américains et Haïti, 1804-1893 (Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2016), and recently coedited and coauthored a collection of essays entitled Couleurs, esclavage, libérations coloniales, 1804-1860 (Bécherel: Les Perséides, 2013).




  • Introduction

Claire Parfait, Hélène Le Dantec-Lowry, and Claire Bourhis-Mariotti


PART I: New Perspectives on African American History


  • Chapter 1. "The grandest book ever written": Advertising Joseph T. Wilson's Black Phalanx (1888)


Claire Parfait



  • Chapter 2. A Race Against Obscurity: Merl R. Eppse and The Negro, Too, in American History


Cheryl Knott



  • Chapter 3. Abolitionist Black Histories and Historians in Massachusetts Petitions


Nicole Topich


  • Chapter 4. From the Margins with a Legacy of Agency in Africanity: An Encyclopedic Idea


Michael Benjamin


PART II : Material and Visual Culture and the Writing of History


  • Chapter 5. Work, Class, and Respectability in Robert Roberts's House Servant's Directory or, A Monitor for Private Families (Boston, 1827)


Hélène Le Dantec-Lowry



  • Chapter 6. Expressions of Self and Belonging: Enslaved People and Race-Based Fashion in the Antebellum U.S. South


Katie Knowles



  • Chapter 7. African American Quilts: Color, Creation, (Counter)Culture


Géraldine Chouard



  • Chapter 8. Freeman Murray and the Art of Social Justice


James Smalls



  • Chapter 9. Romare Bearden: The Making of a Black Political Cartoonist


Amy Kirschke


  • Notes on the Contributors and Editors



  • Index


andere Formate