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This book examines the relationship between antislavery texts and emerging representations of 'free labour' in mid-nineteenth-century America. |
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Tags: Nineteenth-Century, Discourse, Antislavery, American, Literature |
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In contrast to the prevailing scholarly con-sensus that understands sentimentality to be grounded on a logic of love and sympathy, Apocalyptic Sentimentalism demonstrates that in order for sentimentality to work as an antislavery engine, it needed to be linked to its seeming opposite—fear, especially the fear of God’s wrath. Most antislavery reformers recognized that calls for love and sympathy or the representation of suffering slaves would not lead an audience to “feel right” or to actively oppose slavery. |
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Tags: sympathy, Sentimentalism, antislavery, sentimentality, Apocalyptic |
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Bleeding Kansas
Bestseller Paretsky, who has tackled weighty issues in her V.I. Warshawski detective series (e.g., the Holocaust in Total Recall), weaves a gripping contemporary novel around three farm families—the Grelliers, Fremantles and Schapens—that can trace their Kaw Valley, Kans., roots back to the 1850s, a time of violent clashes between antislavery and proslavery forces in Bleeding Kansas. Their shared history is no buffer against the storm of changes that begin with the arrival of Gina Haring, a lesbian Wiccan.
REUPLOAD NEEDED |
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Tags: mdash, Bleeding, Kansas, antislavery, forces, between, proslavery, Their |