What's new

Welcome to App4Day.com

Join us now to get access to all our features. Once registered and logged in, you will be able to create topics, post replies to existing threads, give reputation to your fellow members, get your own private messenger, and so, so much more. It's also quick and totally free, so what are you waiting for?

Undoing Slavery Bodies, Race, and Rights in the Age of Abolition

F

Frankie

Moderator
Joined
Jul 7, 2023
Messages
101,954
Reaction score
0
Points
36
e9d9d47abeaa5c9d22e14091b8802a2b.jpeg

Free Download Kathleen M. Brown, "Undoing Slavery: Bodies, Race, and Rights in the Age of Abolition "
English | ISBN: 1512823279 | 2023 | 456 pages | PDF | 7 MB
Undoing Slavery excavates cultural, political, medical, and legal history to understand the abolitionist focus on the body on its own terms. Motivated by their conviction that the physical form of the human body was universal and faced with the growing racism of eighteenth- and nineteenth-century science, abolitionists in North America and Britain focused on undoing slavery's harm to the bodies of the enslaved. Their pragmatic focus on restoring the bodily integrity and wellbeing of enslaved people threw up many unexpected challenges. This book explores those challenges.​

Slavery exploited the bodies of men and women differently: enslaved women needed to be acknowledged as mothers rather than as reproducers of slave property, and enslaved men needed to claim full adult personhood without triggering white fears about their access to male privilege. Slavery's undoing became more fraught by the 1850s, moreover, as federal Fugitive Slave Law and racist medicine converged. The reach of the federal government across the borders of free states and theories about innate racial difference collapsed the distinctions between enslaved and emancipated people of African descent, making militant action necessary.
Escaping to so-called "free" jurisdictions, refugees from slavery demonstrated that a person could leave the life of slavery behind. But leaving behind the enslaved body, the fleshy archive of trauma and injury, proved impossible. Bodies damaged by slavery needed urgent physical care as well as access to medical knowledge untainted by racist science. As the campaign to end slavery revealed, legal rights alone, while necessary, were not sufficient either to protect or heal the bodies of African-descended people from the consequences of slavery and racism.
Read more

Recommend Download Link Hight Speed | Please Say Thanks Keep Topic Live

Rapidgator
x2gum.rar.html
NitroFlare
x2gum.rar
Uploadgig
x2gum.rar
Fikper
x2gum.rar.html
Links are Interchangeable - Single Extraction
 
Top Bottom