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Dark Victorians
University of Illinois Press, 2007 Cloth: 978-0-252-03256-1 | eISBN: 978-0-252-09098-1 Library of Congress Classification E185.61.D53 2008 Dewey Decimal Classification 305.800941
ABOUT THIS BOOK | AUTHOR BIOGRAPHY | REVIEWS | TOC
ABOUT THIS BOOK
Dark Victorians illuminates the cross-cultural influences between white Britons and black Americans during the Victorian age. In carefully analyzing literature and travel narratives by Ida B. Wells, Harriet Martineau, Charles Dickens, Frederick Douglass, Thomas Carlyle, W.E.B. Du Bois, and others, Vanessa D. Dickerson reveals the profound political, racial, and rhetorical exchanges between the groups. From the nineteenth-century black nationalist David Walker, who urged emigrating African Americans to turn to England, to the twentieth-century writer Maya Angelou, who recalls how those she knew in her childhood aspired to Victorian ideas of conduct, black Americans have consistently embraced Victorian England. At a time when scholars of black studies are exploring the relations between diasporic blacks, and postcolonialists are taking imperialism to task, Dickerson considers how Britons negotiated their support of African Americans with the controlling policies they used to govern a growing empire of often dark-skinned peoples, and how philanthropic and abolitionist Victorian discourses influenced black identity, prejudice, and racism in America. See other books on: 1868-1963 | British | Dickerson, Vanessa D. | Du Bois, W. E. B. (William Edward Burghardt) | Transnationalism See other titles from University of Illinois Press |
Nearby on shelf for United States / Elements in the population / Afro-Americans:
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