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Women's Rights and Transatlantic Antislavery in the Era of Emancipation
16. Enacting Emancipation: African American Women Abolitionists at Oberlin College and the Quest for Empowerment, Equality, and Respectability
edited-book
Author(s):
Carol Lasser
Publication date:
December 31 2017
Publisher:
Yale University Press
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SDG 5: Gender Equality
Author and book information
Book Chapter
Publication date:
December 31 2017
Pages
: 319-345
DOI:
10.12987/9780300137866-018
SO-VID:
4d7a5107-a0e0-4938-9033-62e1a0a6bae5
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Book chapters
pp. i
Frontmatter
pp. vii
Contents
pp. x
Illustrations
pp. xi
Introduction
pp. 3
1. Declaring Equality: Sisterhood and Slavery
pp. 19
2. Sisterhood, Slavery, and Sovereignty: Transnational Antislavery Work and Women’s Rights Movements in the United States During the Twentieth Century
pp. 57
3. How (and Why) the Analogy of Marriage with Slavery Provided the Springboard for Women’s Rights Demands in France, 1640–1848 57 Karen Offen
pp. 82
4. Frauenemancipation and Beyond: The Use of the Concept of Emancipation by Early European Feminists
pp. 98
5. Women’s Mobilization in the Era of Slave Emancipation: Some Anglo-French Comparisons
pp. 121
6. British Abolition and Feminism in Transatlantic Perspective
pp. 143
7. Sarah Forten’s Anti-Slavery Networks
pp. 158
8. Incidents Abroad: Harriet Jacobs and the Transatlantic Movement
pp. 173
9. ‘‘Like Hot Lead to Pour on the Americans . . .’’: Sarah Parker Remond—From Salem, Mass., to the British Isles
pp. 189
10. Literary Transnationalism and Diasporic History: Frances Watkins Harper’s ‘‘Fancy Sketches,’’ 1859–60
pp. 211
11. ‘‘The Throne of My Heart’’: Religion, Oratory, and Transatlantic Community in Angelina Grimké’s Launching of Women’s Rights, 1828–1838
pp. 242
12. The Redemption of a Heretic: Harriet Martineau and Anglo-American Abolitionism
pp. 266
13. ‘‘Seeking a Larger Liberty’’: Remapping First Wave Feminism
pp. 279
14. Ernestine Rose’s Jewish Origins and the Varieties of Euro-American Emancipation in 1848
pp. 299
15. Writing for True Womanhood: African-American Women’s Writings and the Antislavery Struggle
pp. 319
16. Enacting Emancipation: African American Women Abolitionists at Oberlin College and the Quest for Empowerment, Equality, and Respectability
pp. 346
17. At the Boundaries of Abolitionism, Feminism, and Black Nationalism: The Activism of Mary Ann Shadd Cary 346
pp. 367
Contributors
pp. 369
Index
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