Colonization and Its Discontents
Autor Beverly C. Tomeken Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 sep 2012
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780814764534
ISBN-10: 0814764533
Pagini: 322
Dimensiuni: 151 x 231 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: NYU Press - IPS
ISBN-10: 0814764533
Pagini: 322
Dimensiuni: 151 x 231 x 22 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: NYU Press - IPS
Recenzii
Tomek offers a brilliant and provocative analysis of the antislavery network. This work is an extraordinary contribution to the historical understanding of American colonization. Orville Vernon Burton, author of The Age of LincolnColonization and Its Discontents challenges historians of the antebellum period to reconsider basic questions--questions about distinctions between abolitionist versus antislavery, between immediatist versus gradualist, and between competing versions of African colonization. By concentrating on the full spectrum of antislavery ideology within a single state and by questioning long-held assumptions, Tomek offers an expansive and revealing analysis of the antislavery impulse. James Brewer Stewart, James Wallace Professor of History, Emeritus, Macalester College
Tomek makes a good case for examining Pennsylvania. The states residents championed different varieties of colonization, as well as two other brands of anti-slavery activism (i.e. the gradualism associated with the Pennsylvania Abolition Society and the immediatism Associated with Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society). In illuminating the robust and diverse debate among anti-slavery Pennsylvanians, Tomek explicitly challenges Richard Newmans argument that the epicentre of the anti-slavery movement shifter from Pennsylvania to Massachusetts during the early antebellum period. - Eric Burin, Journal of American Studies, November 2012
"Tomek offers a brilliant and provocative analysis of the antislavery network. This work is an extraordinary contribution to the historical understanding of American colonization." Orville Vernon Burton, author of The Age of Lincoln "Colonization and Its Discontents challenges historians of the antebellum period to reconsider basic questions--questions about distinctions between abolitionist versus antislavery, between immediatist versus gradualist, and between competing versions of African colonization. By concentrating on the full spectrum of antislavery ideology within a single state and by questioning long-held assumptions, Tomek offers an expansive and revealing analysis of the antislavery impulse." James Brewer Stewart, James Wallace Professor of History, Emeritus, Macalester College "Tomek makes a good case for examining Pennsylvania. The state's residents championed different varieties of colonization, as well as two other brands of anti-slavery activism (i.e. the "gradualism" associated with the Pennsylvania Abolition Society and the immediatism Associated with Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society). In illuminating the robust and diverse debate among anti-slavery Pennsylvanians, Tomek explicitly challenges Richard Newman's argument that the epicentre of the anti-slavery movement shifter from Pennsylvania to Massachusetts during the early antebellum period." - Eric Burin, Journal of American Studies, November 2012
Tomek makes a good case for examining Pennsylvania. The states residents championed different varieties of colonization, as well as two other brands of anti-slavery activism (i.e. the gradualism associated with the Pennsylvania Abolition Society and the immediatism Associated with Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society). In illuminating the robust and diverse debate among anti-slavery Pennsylvanians, Tomek explicitly challenges Richard Newmans argument that the epicentre of the anti-slavery movement shifter from Pennsylvania to Massachusetts during the early antebellum period. - Eric Burin, Journal of American Studies, November 2012
"Tomek offers a brilliant and provocative analysis of the antislavery network. This work is an extraordinary contribution to the historical understanding of American colonization." Orville Vernon Burton, author of The Age of Lincoln "Colonization and Its Discontents challenges historians of the antebellum period to reconsider basic questions--questions about distinctions between abolitionist versus antislavery, between immediatist versus gradualist, and between competing versions of African colonization. By concentrating on the full spectrum of antislavery ideology within a single state and by questioning long-held assumptions, Tomek offers an expansive and revealing analysis of the antislavery impulse." James Brewer Stewart, James Wallace Professor of History, Emeritus, Macalester College "Tomek makes a good case for examining Pennsylvania. The state's residents championed different varieties of colonization, as well as two other brands of anti-slavery activism (i.e. the "gradualism" associated with the Pennsylvania Abolition Society and the immediatism Associated with Pennsylvania Anti-Slavery Society). In illuminating the robust and diverse debate among anti-slavery Pennsylvanians, Tomek explicitly challenges Richard Newman's argument that the epicentre of the anti-slavery movement shifter from Pennsylvania to Massachusetts during the early antebellum period." - Eric Burin, Journal of American Studies, November 2012
Descriere
Examination of the complexity of the colonization movement, describing the difference between those who supported colonization for political and social reasons and those who supported it for religious and humanitarian reasons
Notă biografică
Beverly C. Tomek is Assistant Professor of History at the University of Houston-Victoria in Victoria, Texas.