A Bibliography of Contemporary North American Indians : Selected and Partially Annotated with Study Guides / William H

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

A Bibliography of Contemporary North American Indians : Selected and Partially Annotated with Study Guides / William H A Catalog of the National Underground Railroad Freedom Center Library Materials On‐Loan to the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County Cataloged by the Staff of the Cataloging Services Department Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County Edited by Roger M. Miller Cataloging Services Department Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County September 2008 The Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County 800 Vine Street Cincinnati, Ohio 45202‐2071 513‐369‐6900 www.cincinnatilibrary.org The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center, located on the banks of the Ohio River in downtown Cincinnati, Ohio, opened its doors on August 23, 2004. The Freedom Center facility initially included the John Rankin Library, but funding issues eventually lead to the elimination of the librarian position and closing the library to the public. In the fall of 2007, the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County and The National Underground Railroad Freedom Center entered into an agreement for their John Rankin Library to be housed at the Main Library in downtown Cincinnati as a long‐term loan. The initial loan period is 10 years. The items from the Freedom Center have been added to the Library’s catalog and have been incorporated into the Main Library’s Genealogy & Local History collection. These materials are available for the public to check out, if a circulating item, or to use at the Main Library, if a reference work. The unique nature of the Freedom Center’s collection enhances the Main Library’s reference and circulating collections while making the materials acquired by the Freedom Center again available to the public. This catalog provides an author/title listing of the 1,772 titles having at least one copy on ‐loan from the Freedom Center. About 850 of these titles were new to the Public Library collection, and the others were added as duplicate copies. A listing of the collection given in call number order follows the author/title listing, beginning on page 233. Each entry includes author, title, publication, physical description, series, and call number information. Full bibliographic descriptions are available online at the Library’s catalog, http://catalog.cincinnatilibrary.org/. For more information about using the resources described in this catalog, contact the Genealogy & Local History Department of the Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County at (513) 369‐6905. Roger M. Miller Manager, Cataloging Services Department Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County September 2008 - i - 2003 museum financial information / edited by Elizabeth E. Merritt. Washington, DC : American Association of Museums, c2003. 142 p. : col. ill., map ; 28 cm. 069.0681 qT974 2003 Abolition and its aftermath : the historical context, 1790-1916 / edited by David Richardson. London, England ; Totowa, N.J. : F. Cass, 1985. ix, 279 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. (Legacies of West Indian slavery) 326.09729 A154 1985 L'abolition de l'esclavage : un combat pour les droits de l'homme / textes réunis et présentés par Chantal Georgel, en collaboration avec Françoise Vergès et Alain Vivien ; préface de Henri Leclerc. Bruxelles : Complexe, c1998. 165, [2] p. ; 22 cm. 306.362094 L122 1998 Abolition of slavery and the aftermath of emancipation in Brazil / Rebecca J. Scott ... [et al.]. Durham : Duke University Press, 1988. vi, 173 p. ; 23 cm. 326.0981 A154 Africa : an encyclopedia for students / John Middleton, editor. New York : Charles Scribner's Sons : Gale Group, c2002. 4 v. : ill. (some col.), maps ; 29 cm. 960.03 qA258, 2002 Africa discovers her past / edited by J. D. Fage. London : Oxford University Press, 1970. viii, 96 p. ; 20 cm. 960.072 A258 1970 African American autobiographers : a sourcebook / edited by Emmanuel S. Nelson. Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 2002. xv, 416 p. ; 24 cm. 818.08 A258, 2002 The African American book of values : classic moral stories / edited with commentary by Steven Barboza. 1st ed. New York : Doubleday, c1998. xvii, 939 p. ; 25 cm. 170.899607 A258, 1998 African American history in the press, 1851-1899 : from the coming of the Civil War to the rise of Jim Crow as reported and illustrated in selected newspapers of the time / Schneider collection. 1st ed. Detroit, MI : Gale Research, 1996. 2 v. : ill., maps ; 29 cm. 973.0496073 qA2581, 1996 - 1 - Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County—NURFC Catalog African American slave narratives : an anthology / edited by Sterling Lecater Bland, Jr. Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 2001. 3 v. ; 25 cm. 306.362092 A258 2001 African Americans and political participation : a reference handbook / Minion K. C. Morrison, editor. Santa Barbara, Calif. : ABC-CLIO, c2003. xxiii, 400 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. (Political participation in America) 323.042089 A258, 2003 African Americans in sports / edited by David K. Wiggins, editor. Armonk, N.Y. : Sharpe Reference, c2004. 2 v. (various pagings) : ill. ; 26 cm. 796.0922 qA2581 2004 African Americans : voices of triumph. Creative fire / by the editors of Time-Life Books. Alexandria, Va. : Time-Life Books, 1994. 256 p. : ill. (some col.) ; 29 cm. 973.0496073 qA2583, 1994 African Muslims in antebellum America : transatlantic stories and spiritual struggles / Allan D. Austin. [Rev. and updated ed.]. New York : Routledge, 1997. xiii, 194 p. : ill., maps ; 24 cm. 973.0496 A258 1997 Africana : the encyclopedia of the African and African American experience / editors, Kwame Anthony Appiah, Henry Louis Gates. 1st ed. New York : Basic Civitas Books, c1999. xxvii, 2095 p. : ill. (some col.), col. maps ; 29 cm. 909.0496 qA258 1999 African-American records Bracken County, Kentucky 1797-1999 / compiled by African-American Records Committee; Caroline R. Miller, chairperson. Millennium ed. Brooksville, Ky. : Bracken County Historical Society, 1999. 2 v. (iv, 1,085 p.) : ill., maps ; 28 cm. 929.3769325 qA258, 1999 The Afro world : adventures in ideas / editor, O.R. Dathorne. Coral Gables, Fla. : Association of Caribbean Studies ; [Madison] : University of Wisconsin System, c1984. 172 p. ; 23 cm. 909.4096 A2581 1984 Afro-American history : past to present / edited by Henry N. Drewry and Cecelia H. Drewry. New York : Scribner, c1971. xiii, 545 p. ; 24 cm. 973.0496073 A2589 1971 - 2 - Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County—NURFC Catalog Afro-American literature : drama / William Adams, Peter Conn, Barry Slepian. Boston : Houghton Mifflin, c1970. 246 p. : ill. ; 21 cm. 812.540808 A258 1970 Afro-American literature : fiction / [compiled by] William Adams, Peter Conn, Barry Slepian. Boston : Houghton Mifflin Co., c1970. 161 p. : port. ; 21 cm. 813.008089 A2582a 1970 Afro-American literature : fiction : teacher's guide / William Adams, Peter Conn, Barry Slepian. Boston : Houghton Mifflin Co., c1970. 39 p. ; 22 cm. 813.008089 A2582 1970 Afro-American literature nonfiction / [compiled by] William Adams, Peter Conn, Barry Slepian. Boston : Houghton Mifflin, c1970. 180 p. : ill. ; 21 cm. 810.809 A258 1970 The Afro-American woman : struggles and images / edited by Sharon Harley and Rosalyn Terborg-Penn. Port Washington, N.Y. : National University Publications, 1978. xiii, 137 p. ; 22 cm. (Series in American studies) 301.4120973 A258 After slavery : emancipation and its discontents / editor, Howard Temperley. London ; Portland, OR : Frank Cass, 2000. 310 p. ; 23 cm. (Studies in slave and post-slave societies and cultures,ISSN1462-1770) 326.809 A258 2000 Age and arts participation with a focus on the baby boom cohort / Richard A. Peterson ... [et al.]. Santa Ana, Calif. : Seven Locks Press, [1996] x, 142 p. : ill. ; 26 cm. (Research Division report ; #34) 700.103097 qA265 1996 Ain't I a woman! : a book of women's poetry from around the world / edited by Illona Linthwaite. New York : Barnes & Noble, 1999, c1987. xvii, 195 p. ; 24 cm. 808.81935 A297 1999 Amazing grace : an anthology of poems about slavery, 1660-1810 / edited by James G. Basker. New Haven : Yale University Press, c2002. lvii, 721 p. ; 25 cm. 821.008035 A489, 2002 - 3 - Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County—NURFC Catalog Amistad 1 / edited by John A. Williams and Charles F. Harris. Vintage books ed. New York : Vintage Books, 1970. ix, 308 p. ; 19 cm. (Vintage book, V-605) 973.0496073 A517 1970 "And don't call me a racist" : a treasury of quotes on the past, present and future of the color line in America / selected and arranged by Ella Mazel. Lexington, Mass. : Argonaut Press, c1998. xii, 164 p. : ill. ; 21 cm. 305.800973 A543, 1998 The Antebellum era : primary documents on events from 1820 to 1860 / [compiled by] David A. Copeland. Westport, Conn. : Greenwood Press, 2003. xiii, 423 p. : ill. ; 25 cm. (Debating historical issues in the media of the time) 973.5 A627, 2003 The Anthropology of media : a reader/ edited by Kelly Askew and Richard R. Wilk. Malden, MA : Blackwell Publishers, 2002. xi, 416 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. (Blackwell readers in anthropology ; 2) 302.23 A628 2002 Approaches to women's history : a resource book and teaching guide / Anne Chapman, editor. Washington, DC : American Historical Association, c1979. xv, 143 p. : ill. ; 30 cm. 016.379156 qA652 1979 Apropos of Africa : Afro-American leaders and the romance of Africa / compiled and edited by Adelaide Cromwell Hill and Martin Kilson. Garden City, N.Y. : Anchor Books, 1971, c1969. xiv, 458 p. ; 19 cm. 301.29174 A654 1971 Archaeological perspectives on ethnicity in America : Afro-American and Asian American culture history / edited by Robert L. Schuyler. Farmingdale, N.Y. : Baywood Pub. Co., c1980. x, 147 p. : ill. ; 23 cm. (Baywood monographs in archaeology ; 1) 973.04951 A669 1980 As they saw slavery / [compiled by] Eugene H. Berwanger. Minneapolis : Winston Press, c1973. viii, 166 p. : ill. ; 22 x 26 cm. 306.362097 A797 1973 - 4 - Public Library of Cincinnati and Hamilton County—NURFC Catalog Asian freedoms : the idea of freedom in East and Southeast Asia / edited by David Kelly and Anthony Reid. Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 1998. x, 228 p.
Recommended publications
  • Aalseth Aaron Aarup Aasen Aasheim Abair Abanatha Abandschon Abarca Abarr Abate Abba Abbas Abbate Abbe Abbett Abbey Abbott Abbs
    BUSCAPRONTA www.buscapronta.com ARQUIVO 35 DE PESQUISAS GENEALÓGICAS 306 PÁGINAS – MÉDIA DE 98.500 SOBRENOMES/OCORRÊNCIA Para pesquisar, utilize a ferramenta EDITAR/LOCALIZAR do WORD. A cada vez que você clicar ENTER e aparecer o sobrenome pesquisado GRIFADO (FUNDO PRETO) corresponderá um endereço Internet correspondente que foi pesquisado por nossa equipe. Ao solicitar seus endereços de acesso Internet, informe o SOBRENOME PESQUISADO, o número do ARQUIVO BUSCAPRONTA DIV ou BUSCAPRONTA GEN correspondente e o número de vezes em que encontrou o SOBRENOME PESQUISADO. Número eventualmente existente à direita do sobrenome (e na mesma linha) indica número de pessoas com aquele sobrenome cujas informações genealógicas são apresentadas. O valor de cada endereço Internet solicitado está em nosso site www.buscapronta.com . Para dados especificamente de registros gerais pesquise nos arquivos BUSCAPRONTA DIV. ATENÇÃO: Quando pesquisar em nossos arquivos, ao digitar o sobrenome procurado, faça- o, sempre que julgar necessário, COM E SEM os acentos agudo, grave, circunflexo, crase, til e trema. Sobrenomes com (ç) cedilha, digite também somente com (c) ou com dois esses (ss). Sobrenomes com dois esses (ss), digite com somente um esse (s) e com (ç). (ZZ) digite, também (Z) e vice-versa. (LL) digite, também (L) e vice-versa. Van Wolfgang – pesquise Wolfgang (faça o mesmo com outros complementos: Van der, De la etc) Sobrenomes compostos ( Mendes Caldeira) pesquise separadamente: MENDES e depois CALDEIRA. Tendo dificuldade com caracter Ø HAMMERSHØY – pesquise HAMMERSH HØJBJERG – pesquise JBJERG BUSCAPRONTA não reproduz dados genealógicos das pessoas, sendo necessário acessar os documentos Internet correspondentes para obter tais dados e informações. DESEJAMOS PLENO SUCESSO EM SUA PESQUISA.
    [Show full text]
  • Past, Present, and Future FIFTY YEARS of ANTHROPOLOGY in SUDAN
    Past, present, and future FIFTY YEARS OF ANTHROPOLOGY IN SUDAN Munzoul A. M. Assal Musa Adam Abdul-Jalil Past, present, and future FIFTY YEARS OF ANTHROPOLOGY IN SUDAN Munzoul A. M. Assal Musa Adam Abdul-Jalil FIFTY YEARS OF ANTHROPOLOGY IN SUDAN: PAST, PRESENT, AND FUTURE Copyright © Chr. Michelsen Institute 2015. P.O. Box 6033 N-5892 Bergen Norway [email protected] Printed at Kai Hansen Trykkeri Kristiansand AS, Norway Cover photo: Liv Tønnessen Layout and design: Geir Årdal ISBN 978-82-8062-521-2 Contents Table of contents .............................................................................iii Notes on contributors ....................................................................vii Acknowledgements ...................................................................... xiii Preface ............................................................................................xv Chapter 1: Introduction Munzoul A. M. Assal and Musa Adam Abdul-Jalil ......................... 1 Chapter 2: The state of anthropology in the Sudan Abdel Ghaffar M. Ahmed .................................................................21 Chapter 3: Rethinking ethnicity: from Darfur to China and back—small events, big contexts Gunnar Haaland ........................................................................... 37 Chapter 4: Strategic movement: a key theme in Sudan anthropology Wendy James ................................................................................ 55 Chapter 5: Urbanisation and social change in the Sudan Fahima Zahir El-Sadaty ................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • Ishmael Reed Interviewed
    Boxing on Paper: Ishmael Reed Interviewed by Don Starnes [email protected] http://www.donstarnes.com/dp/ Don Starnes is an award winning Director and Director of Photography with thirty years of experience shooting in amazing places with fascinating people. He has photographed a dozen features, innumerable documentaries, commercials, web series, TV shows, music and corporate videos. His work has been featured on National Geographic, Discovery Channel, Comedy Central, HBO, MTV, VH1, Speed Channel, Nerdist, and many theatrical and festival screens. Ishmael Reed [in the white shirt] in New Orleans, Louisiana, September 2016 (photo by Tennessee Reed). 284 Africology: The Journal of Pan African Studies, vol.10. no.1, March 2017 Editor’s note: Here author (novelist, essayist, poet, songwriter, editor), social activist, publisher and professor emeritus Ishmael Reed were interviewed by filmmaker Don Starnes during the 2014 University of California at Merced Black Arts Movement conference as part of an ongoing film project documenting powerful leaders of the Black Arts and Black Power Movements. Since 2014, Reed’s interview was expanded to take into account the presidency of Donald Trump. The title of this interview was supplied by this publication. Ishmael Reed (b. 1938) is the winner of the prestigious MacArthur Fellowship (genius award), the renowned L.A. Times Robert Kirsch Lifetime Achievement Award, the Lila Wallace-Reader's Digest Award, a Guggenheim Fellowship, and a Rosenthal Family Foundation Award from the National Institute for Arts and Letters. He has been nominated for a Pulitzer and finalist for two National Book Awards and is Professor Emeritus at the University of California at Berkeley (a thirty-five year presence); he has also taught at Harvard, Yale and Dartmouth.
    [Show full text]
  • Forced Labour at the Frontier of Empires: Manipur and the French Congo”, Comparatif
    “Forced Labour at the Frontier of Empires: Manipur and the French Congo”, Comparatif. Yaruipam Muivah, Alessandro Stanziani To cite this version: Yaruipam Muivah, Alessandro Stanziani. “Forced Labour at the Frontier of Empires: Manipur and the French Congo”, Comparatif.. Comparativ, Leipzig University, 2019, 29 (3), pp.41-64. hal-02954571 HAL Id: hal-02954571 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-02954571 Submitted on 1 Oct 2020 HAL is a multi-disciplinary open access L’archive ouverte pluridisciplinaire HAL, est archive for the deposit and dissemination of sci- destinée au dépôt et à la diffusion de documents entific research documents, whether they are pub- scientifiques de niveau recherche, publiés ou non, lished or not. The documents may come from émanant des établissements d’enseignement et de teaching and research institutions in France or recherche français ou étrangers, des laboratoires abroad, or from public or private research centers. publics ou privés. Yaruipam Muivah, Alessandro Stanziani Forced Labour at the Frontier of Empires: Manipur and the French Congo, 1890-1914. Debates about abolition of slavery have essentially focused on two interrelated questions: 1) whether nineteenth and early twentieth century abolitions were a major breakthrough compared to previous centuries (or even millennia) in the history of humankind during which bondage had been the dominant form of labour and human condition. 2) whether they express an action specific to western bourgeoisie and liberal civilization. It is true that the number of abolitionist acts and the people concerned throughout the extended nineteenth century (1780- 1914) had no equivalent in history: 30 million Russian peasants, half a million slaves in Saint- Domingue in 1790, four million slaves in the US in 1860, another million in the Caribbean (at the moment of the abolition of 1832-40), a further million in Brazil in 1885 and 250,000 in the Spanish colonies were freed during this period.
    [Show full text]
  • Reparations for the Slave Trade: Rhetoric, Law, History and Political Realities”
    ©Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann Feb 5, 2007 1 WORKING PAPER “Reparations for the Slave Trade: Rhetoric, Law, History and Political Realities” Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann Canada Research Chair International Human Rights Wilfrid Laurier University Waterloo, Ontario, Canada N2L 3C5 [email protected], +1 (519) 884-0710 ext 2780 Neither this paper, nor any part of it, is to be reproduced or circulated without permission of the author. Note to Readers: This paper is drawn from my book in progress (with Anthony P. Lombardo), Reparations to Africa, especially chapter 5 (“The Slave Trade: Law and Rhetoric”), chapter 6 “The Slave Trade: Debates,” and chapter 1, “Reparations to Africa: A New Kind of Justice.” Introduction This paper considers the call for reparations to Africa from the West, for the trans-Atlantic slave trade, as a form of transitional justice between regions (the West and Africa), which might result in better understanding—and less political resentment, between the two areas. Nevertheless, the call for reparations is so far ridden with rhetorical over-statements, misunderstandings of international law, and misinterpretations C:/reparations/working papers/UConn march 12 07 ©Rhoda E. Howard-Hassmann Feb 5, 2007 2 of history. These are unlikely to result in any material reparations from the West to Africa for the slave trade. The discussion below focuses especially on the 2001 United Nations World Conference against Racism in Durban, South Africa, and on the call for reparations by the Group of Eminent Persons (GEP) established by the Organization of African Unity in 1992. The two remaining active members of the GEP in the early twenty-first century were Ali Mazrui and Jacob Ajayi.
    [Show full text]
  • 2001 Annual Report
    NATIONAL ENDOWMENT FOR THE HUMANITIES 2001 annual report Contents About NEH 2 Jefferson Lecture 3 National Humanities Medalists 4 Education 6 Preservation and Access 18 Public Programs 35 Research 50 Challenge Grants 72 Federal State Partnership 80 Office of Enterprise 87 Summer Fellows Program 90 Panelists 90 Senior Staff Members 128 National Council 130 Financial Report 131 2001 NEH Annual Report 1 The National Endowment for the Humanities In order “to promote progress and scholarship in the humanities and the arts in the United States,” Congress enacted the National Foundation on the Arts and the Humanities Act of 1965. This act established the National Endowment for the Humanities as an independent grant-making agency of the federal government to support research, education, and public programs in the humanities. In fiscal year 2001, grants were made through Federal-State Partnership, four divisions (Education Programs, Preservation and Access, Public Programs, and Research Programs) and the Office of Challenge Grants. The act that established the National Endowment for the Humanities says, “The term ‘humanities’ includes, but is not limited to, the study of the following: language, both modern and classical; linguistics; literature; history; jurisprudence; philosophy; archaeology; comparative religion; ethics; the history, criticism, and theory of the arts; those aspects of social sciences which have humanistic content and employ humanistic methods; and the study and application of the humanities to the human environment with particular attention to reflecting our diverse heritage, traditions, and history and to the relevance of the humanities to the current conditions of national life.” The National Endowment for the Humanities supports exemplary work to advance and disseminate knowledge in all the disciplines of the humanities.
    [Show full text]
  • Justice Jackson and the Second Flag-Salute Case: Reason and Passion in Opinion Writing
    University of Missouri School of Law Scholarship Repository Faculty Publications Faculty Scholarship 2011 Justice Jackson and the Second Flag-Salute Case: Reason and Passion in Opinion Writing Douglas E. Abrams University of Missouri School of Law, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarship.law.missouri.edu/facpubs Part of the Law Commons Recommended Citation Douglas E. Abrams, Justice Jackson and the Second Flag-Salute Case: Reason and Passion in Opinion Writing, 36 Journal of Supreme Court History 30 (2011). Available at: https://scholarship.law.missouri.edu/facpubs/890 This Article is brought to you for free and open access by the Faculty Scholarship at University of Missouri School of Law Scholarship Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Faculty Publications by an authorized administrator of University of Missouri School of Law Scholarship Repository. For more information, please contact [email protected]. Legal Studies Research Paper Series Research Paper No. 2015-01 Justice Jackson and the Second Flag-Salute Case: Reason and Passion in Opinion Writing Douglas E. Abrams 36 JOURNAL OF SUPREME COURT HISTORY 30 (2011) This paper can be downloaded without charge from the Social Sciences Research Network Electronic Paper Collection at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2547781 Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2547781 Justice Jackson and the Second Flag-Salute Case: Reason and Passion In Opinion Writing by Douglas E. Abrams University of Missouri School of Law (36 JOURNAL OF SUPREME COURT HISTORY 30 (2011)) Electronic copy available at: http://ssrn.com/abstract=2547781 Justice Jackson and the Second Flag-Salute Case: Reason and Passion In Judicial Opinion Writing I.
    [Show full text]
  • NTOZAKE SHANGE, JAMILA WOODS, and NITTY SCOTT by Rachel O
    THEORIZING BLACK WOMANHOOD IN ART: NTOZAKE SHANGE, JAMILA WOODS, AND NITTY SCOTT by Rachel O. Smith A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of Purdue University In Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the degree of Master of Arts Department of English West Lafayette, Indiana May 2020 THE PURDUE UNIVERSITY GRADUATE SCHOOL STATEMENT OF COMMITTEE APPROVAL Dr. Marlo David, Chair Department of English Dr. Aparajita Sagar Department of English Dr. Paul Ryan Schneider Department of English Approved by: Dr. Dorsey Armstrong 2 This thesis is dedicated to my mother, Carol Jirik, who may not always understand why I do this work, but who supports me and loves me unconditionally anyway. 3 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS I would like to first thank Dr. Marlo David for her guidance and validation throughout this process. Her feedback has pushed me to investigate these ideas with more clarity and direction than I initially thought possible, and her mentorship throughout this first step in my graduate career has been invaluable. I would also like to thank the other members of my committee, Dr. Aparajita Sagar and Dr. Ryan Schneider, for helping me polish this piece of writing and for supporting me throughout this two-year program as I prepared to write this by participating in their seminars and working with them to prepare conference materials. Without these three individuals I would not have the confidence that I now have to continue on in my academic career. Additionally, I would like to thank my friends in the English Department at Purdue University and my friends back home in Minnesota who listened to my jumbled thoughts about popular culture and Black womanhood and asked me challenging questions that helped me to shape the argument that appears in this document.
    [Show full text]
  • Outlyers: Maroons and Marronage in Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Literature
    Outlyers: Maroons and Marronage in Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Literature By Sarah Jessica Johnson A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in English in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in charge: Professor Stephen Best, Chair Professor Kathleen Donegan Professor Nadia Ellis Professor Karl Britto Spring 2018 1 Abstract Outlyers: Maroons and Marronage in Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Literature By Sarah Jessica Johnson Doctor of Philosophy in English University of California, Berkeley Professor Stephen Best, Chair My dissertation, “Outlyers: Maroons and Marronage in Eighteenth and Nineteenth-Century Literature,” foregrounds an archival pursuit in which recovery is deprioritized. Crucial to this study is an archival paradox: Maroons absented themselves from the printed record, eschewed the position of author, only to be figured and represented by others who, expectedly, struggled with the depiction of a practice they could not know firsthand. The intentional erasure of “traces” by maroons was necessary to the successful practice of marronage. The project is organized around four “maroon objects”—the portrait, the fetish, the epaulette, and the hatchet—that recur in historical representations concerning maroons. These maroon objects mediate maroon subject and text. My first chapter, “Maroon Portraits,” examines the circulating narratives of La Mulâtresse Solitude of Guadeloupe. Solitude sits for a portrait that is continuously painted, as artists insist on producing visual images in tension with the long textual record that precedes them. Chapter Two, “Maroon Fetishes,” reads the proliferation of fetishes in Le Macandal by Marie Augustin and other iterations of the story of Haitian Maroon leader François Macandal.
    [Show full text]
  • Aaron, Hank, 639, 640 Abbey, Charlotte, 602
    Black Firsts BM 11/16/04 8:22 PM Page 757 Index Note: (ill.) indicates photos and illustrations. A Adams, Alton Augustus, African Day Parade, 470 African-American Aaron, Hank, 639, 640 454 African Dorcas Society, Catholic Church, 543 Abbey, Charlotte, 602 Adams, Cyrus Field, 402 512 African-American Male Abbott, Cleveland, Adams, Floyd, Jr., 361–62 African Free School, 205 Empowerment Sum- 719–20 Adams, John Q., 402 African Insurance Com- mit, 509–10 Abbott, Diane Julie, Adams, Numa Pompilius pany, 85 Afro-American, 402 342–43 Garfield, 607 African Meeting House, The Afro-American Abdul-Jabbar, Kareem, Adams, Oscar William, Jr., 546 Woman: Struggle and 658, 662 226–27, 227 African Methodist Episco- Images, 730 Abel, Elijah, 578 Adams, Victorine Quille, pal (AME) Church, Afro-Presbyterian Coun- Abele, Julian Francis, 1–2 247, 369 537–41 cil, 584 Abernathy, Ralph, 522 Adams-Ender, Clara African Methodist Episco- Agins, Michelle V., 89 Abiel Smith School, 205 Leach, 440–41 pal (AME) Zion Aguta, Lameck, 721 Abolition, 115–17 Adderton, Donald V., 414 Church, 541–43 Agyeman, Jaramogi Abrams, Albert, 501 Adger, William, 163, 164 African Methodist Episco- Abebe, 551 Abrams, Roslyn Maria, Advertising, 77–78 pal Conference, 541 Aiken, William, 257 497 Aframerican Women’s African missionary, 539 Ailey, Alvin, 11 Abyssinian Baptist Journal, 415 African National Con- Air Atlanta, 112 Church (New York, African American Civil gress, 340 Air Force, 427–30 NY), 545, 546 War Memorial, 473 African Orthodox Akerele, Iyombe Academic and Intellectu- African American Poetry Church, 542–43, 583 Botumbe, 344 al Societies, 489–93 Archive, 204 African Street Baptist Alabama Christian Mis- Act to Prohibit the African Baptist Church Church (Mobile, AL), sionary Convention, Importation of Slaves (Albany, NY), 546 547 560 (1808), 117 African Baptist Church African Union American Alabama county and Actor’ Equity Association, (Lexington, KY), 545 Methodist Episcopal state government, 17 African Baptist Church Church, 543 225–27 Ada S.
    [Show full text]
  • ED351246.Pdf
    DOCUMENT RESUME ED 351 246 SO 022 469 TITLE National Endowment for the Humanities, Twenty-Sixth Annual Report, 1991. INSTITUTION National Endowment for the Humanities (NFAH), Washington, D.C. REPORT NO ISSN-8755-5492 PUB DATE 92 NOTE 202p.; For the 24th Annual Report, see ED 322 064. PUB TYPE Reports Descriptive (141) EDRS PRICE MF01/PC09 Plus Postage. DESCRIPTORS Elementary Secondary Education; *Federal Aid; *Federal Programs; *Grants; Higher Education; *Humanities; Research IDENTIFIERS *National Endowment for the Humanities ABSTRACT This report contains brief descriptions of National Endowment for the Humanities programs as well as a complete listing of all Endowment grants, entered by the division and program in which they were funded, for fiscal year 1991 (October 1,1990 through September 30, 1991). The contents of the report are as follows; "Twenty Years of the Jefferson Lecture"; "Letter from the Deputy Chairman"; "How the Endowment Works"; "National Tests"; "The Charles Frankel Prize, Division of Education Programs"; "Division of Fellowships and Seminars"; "Division of Public Programs"; "Division of Research Programs"; "Division of State Programs"; "Office of Challenge Grants, Office of Preservation"; "Panelists in Fiscal Year 1991"; "Senior Staff Members of the Endowment"; "Members of the National Council on the Humanities"; "Summary of Grants and Awards for Fiscal Year 1991"; "Financial Report for Fiscal Year 1991"; and "Index of Grants." (DB) *********************************************************************** Reproductions
    [Show full text]
  • FP 8.2 Summer1988d Updated.Pdf (4.050Mb)
    a current listing of contents Volume 8, Number 2 Summer 1988 Published by Susan Searing, Women's Studies Librarian University of Wisconsin System 1 12A Memorial Library 728 State Street Madison, Wisconsin 53706 (608) 263-5754 a current listing of contents Volume 8, Number 2 Summer 1988 Periodical literature is the cutting edge of women's scholarship, feminist theory, and much of women's culture. Feminist-- Periodicals:- .- - -. - A Current Listing of--- Contents is published by the Office of the University of Wisconsin System Women's Studies Librarian on a quarterly basis with the intent of increasing public awareness of feminist periodicals. It is our hope that Feminist Periodicals wi 11 serve several purposes: to keep the reader abreast of current topics in feminist literature; to increase readers' familiarity with a wide spectrum of feminist periodicals ; and to provide the requisite bib1iographi c information should a reader wish to subscribe to a journal or to obtain a particular article at her library or through interlibrary loan. (Users will need to be aware of the limitations of the new copyright law with regard to photocopying of copyri ghted materi a1 s .) Table of contents pages from current issues of major feminist journals are reproduced in each issue of Femi nist Periodical s , preceded by a comprehensi ve annotated 1isting of a1 1 journals we have selected. As puhl ication schedules vary enormously, not every periodical wi 11 have table of contents pages reproduced in each issue of -FP. The annotated listing provides the following infonnation on each journal : 1. Year of fi rst publication.
    [Show full text]