Abolitionist Geographies

Abolitionist Geographies
Author: Martha Schoolman
Publisher: U of Minnesota Press
Total Pages: 216
Release: 2014-10-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 1452942137

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Traditional narratives of the period leading up to the Civil War are invariably framed in geographical terms. The sectional descriptors of the North, South, and West, like the wartime categories of Union, Confederacy, and border states, mean little without reference to a map of the United States. In Abolitionist Geographies, Martha Schoolman contends that antislavery writers consistently refused those standard terms. Through the idiom Schoolman names “abolitionist geography,” these writers instead expressed their dissenting views about the westward extension of slavery, the intensification of the internal slave trade, and the passage of the Fugitive Slave Law by appealing to other anachronistic, partial, or entirely fictional north–south and east–west axes. Abolitionism’s West, for instance, rarely reached beyond the Mississippi River, but its East looked to Britain for ideological inspiration, its North habitually traversed the Canadian border, and its South often spanned the geopolitical divide between the United States and the British Caribbean. Schoolman traces this geography of dissent through the work of Martin Delany, Ralph Waldo Emerson, William Wells Brown, and Harriet Beecher Stowe, among others. Her book explores new relationships between New England transcendentalism and the British West Indies; African-American cosmopolitanism, Britain, and Haiti; sentimental fiction, Ohio, and Liberia; John Brown’s Appalachia and circum-Caribbean marronage. These connections allow us to see clearly for the first time abolitionist literature’s explicit and intentional investment in geography as an idiom of political critique, by turns liberal and radical, practical and utopian.


Abolitionist Geographies
Language: en
Pages: 216
Authors: Martha Schoolman
Categories: Literary Criticism
Type: BOOK - Published: 2014-10-01 - Publisher: U of Minnesota Press

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Traditional narratives of the period leading up to the Civil War are invariably framed in geographical terms. The sectional descriptors of the North, South, and
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Type: BOOK - Published: 2014-10-20 - Publisher: Routledge

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From David Brion Davis's The Problem of Slavery in the Age of Revolution to Paul Gilroy's The Black Atlantic, some of the most influential conceptualizations of
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Type: BOOK - Published: 2021-09-30 - Publisher: Routledge

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The Geographies of Threat and the Production of Violence exposes the spatial processes of racialising, gendering, and classifying populations through the encode
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Pages: 249
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Type: BOOK - Published: 2010-01-05 - Publisher: Ohio University Press

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