Creating Citizenship in the Nineteenth-Century South /
An edited collection resulting from four international conferences held between 2008 and 2010 on the theme of citizenship in the nineteenth-century American South.
Otros Autores: | |
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Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Gainesville :
University Press of Florida,
2013.
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Colección: | Book collections on Project MUSE.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Part 1: Citizenship in an enslaved society
- 1. "Ter show yo de value of slaves": The pricing of human property / Daina Ramey Berry
- 2. Rewriting the free negro past: Joseph Lumpkin, proslavery ideology, and citizenship in Antebellum Georgia / Watson Jennison
- 3. Free people of color, expulsion, and enslavement in the Antebellum South / Emily West
- 4. Citizenship, democracy, and the structure of politics in the old South: John Calhoun's conundrum / David Brown
- Part 2: Reconstructing citizenship
- 5. Personal reconstructions: Confederates as citizens in the post-Civil War South / James J. Broomall
- 6. Citizenship and racial order in post-Civil War Atlanta / William A. Link
- 7. The antithesis of Union men and Confederate rebels: loyal citizenship in the post-Civil War South / Susanna Michele Lee
- Part 3: Reimagining citizenship
- 8. Dark Satanic fields: Uncle Tom's cabin, industrialization, and the U.S. imperial imaginary / Jennifer Rae Greeson
- 9. Fables of the reconstruction: the citizen as character / Scott Romine
- 10. White supremacy and the question of black citizenship in the post-emancipation South / Daryl Michael Scott
- 11. Tolentino, Cable, and Tourgee confront the new South and the new imperialism / Peter Schmidt
- Epilogue: Place as everywhere: on globalizing the American South / Michael O'brien.