Seeking Abolition: Black Letter Writers and the Pennsylvania Abolition Society in the Era of Gradual Emancipation

IF 0.8 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY JOURNAL OF THE EARLY REPUBLIC Pub Date : 2023-03-01 DOI:10.1353/jer.2023.0000
Mary T. Freeman, Heather Walser, Nora Slonimsky, Jessica Chopin Roney, A. Shankman, Brooke Bauer, E. Ellis, V. Holden, Elise A. Mitchell, W. Stewart, Greta L. Lafleur, Sari Altschuler, C. Crouch, L. Harris, D. Richter, Nicola Martin, M. Lender, Benjamin L. Carp, Kristin O’Brassill-Kulfan, Donald F. Johnson, A. M. Becker, E. Gelles, Rachel Tamar Van, Kambiz GhaneaBassiri, Kara M. French, K. Tillman, Campbell F. Scribner, Sasha Coles
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Abstract

Abstract:During the era of gradual emancipation, between about 1780 and 1830, ordinary African Americans tested the power of correspondence in efforts to advance their claims to freedom. Their demands often exceeded the limits of emancipation laws, but the letters themselves became a form of evidence in cases that challenged the existing legal regime. This article draws upon the correspondence files of the Pennsylvania Abolition Society to reveal a pattern of antislavery activism in which enslaved and free Black correspondents communicated their views directly white abolitionists, seeing themselves as participants in a cooperative activist partnership. Writing as deferential petitioners, indignant parents, aggrieved victims, and shrewd negotiators—sometimes all within the space of the same letter—African Americans used correspondence to present their political concerns as inseparable from their daily lives. Harnessing the medium of correspondence, they made immediate demands for legal freedom and relief from suffering. They also made implicit claims to equality through their conscious deployment of language and letter-writing conventions to reflect good moral character—a prerequisite for equal membership in the body politic. Together, these sources demonstrate that African Americans used letter-writing to secure freedom for themselves and their families as well as to emphasize the universal injustice of slavery and the moral obligation to oppose it.
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寻求废奴:黑人书信作家与逐步解放时代的宾夕法尼亚废奴协会
摘要:在1780年至1830年的逐渐解放时代,普通非裔美国人在努力推进他们的自由主张时,测试了通信的力量。他们的要求往往超出了解放法的限制,但在挑战现有法律制度的案件中,信件本身成为了一种证据形式。这篇文章借鉴了宾夕法尼亚州废奴协会的信件档案,揭示了一种反奴隶制激进主义模式,在这种模式中,被奴役和自由的黑人记者直接与白人废奴主义者交流他们的观点,将自己视为合作活动家伙伴关系的参与者。作为毕恭毕敬的请愿者、愤怒的父母、愤愤不平的受害者和精明的谈判者——有时都在同一封信的范围内——非裔美国人用信件来表达他们与日常生活密不可分的政治关切。他们利用通信媒介,立即要求法律自由和减轻痛苦。他们还通过有意识地运用语言和写信习惯来反映良好的道德品质——这是政治体成员平等的先决条件,从而含蓄地宣称平等。这些消息来源共同表明,非裔美国人使用写信来确保自己和家人的自由,并强调奴隶制的普遍不公正性和反对奴隶制的道德义务。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
70
期刊介绍: The Journal of the Early Republic is a quarterly journal committed to publishing the best scholarship on the history and culture of the United States in the years of the early republic (1776–1861). JER is published for the Society for Historians of the Early American Republic. SHEAR membership includes an annual subscription to the journal.
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