The capital city of a nation founded on the premise of liberty, nineteenth-century Washington, D.C., was both an entrepot of urban slavery and the target of abolitionist ferment. The growing slave trade and the enactment of Black codes placed the city's Black women within the rigid confines of a social hierarchy ordered by race and gender. At the Threshold of Liberty reveals how these women--enslaved, fugitive, and free--imagined new identities and lives beyond the oppressive restrictions intended to prevent them from ever experiencing liberty, self-respect, and power. Consulting newspapers, government documents, letters, abolitionist records, legislation, and memoirs, Tamika Y. Nunley traces how Black women navigated social and legal proscriptions to develop their own ideas about liberty as they escaped from slavery, initiated freedom suits, created entrepreneurial economies, pursued education, and participated in political work. In telling these stories, Nunley places Black women at the vanguard of the history of Washington, D.C., and the momentous transformations of nineteenth-century America.
At the threshold of liberty examines the ways that African American women-enslaved, fugitive, freedwomen, and refugee-lived, survived, and made claims to liberty from the founding of the nation's capital to the American Civil War, focusing ...
Gershom Carmichael was a teacher and writer who played an important role in the Scottish Enlightenment of the eighteenth century, not least by bringing the works of Grotius, Pufendorf, and Locke to the attention of his students and his ...
From Homeric poems to contemporary works, this book traces the words that express the various notions of freedom in Classical Greek, Latin, and medieval and modern European idioms.
Thomas Paine: Enlightenment, Revolution and the Birth of Modern Nation. New York: Viking, 2006. Peterson, Merrill D. Thomas Jefferson & The New Nation: A Biography. New York: Oxford University Press, 1970.
In this enlightening study, Clarence L. Mohr follows the demise of chattel slavery in one state of the Confederate South.
SUNDAY IN JAIL, WASHINGTON, DC, 1861 In December 1861, Frank Leslie's Illustrated Weekly published this spread commenting on depraved conditions on a Sunday in the Washington jail. In the center, a group of African American men and boys ...
This definitive edition of The Constitution of Liberty will give a new generation the opportunity to learn from Hayekâs enduring wisdom.
A new book on how to fix the U.S. government by the #1 New York Times best-selling author of Liberty and Tyranny and Ameritopia.
Art historian Gerald W.R. Ward tells the true story of Paul Revere's most iconic creation, the Sons of Liberty Bowl, made on the threshold of the Revolutionary War.
In this remarkable work, Weil analyses the causes of oppression, its mechanisms and forms, and questions revolutionary responses while presenting a prophetic view of a way forward.