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In a trans-bellum public career of over fifty years, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper fought for abolition, women's suffrage, Black suffrage, civil rights, and temperance. She fashioned a sense of literature across genre that engaged deeply with both her activism and questions of aesthetics, craft, and art. Still, while Harper was well-known during her lifetime, many twentieth-century critics dismissed or ignored her. Even amid interest spurred by a new generation of scholars, Harper has often been reduced to an abolitionist poet who later, decades after emancipation, published a notable novel. Her massive efforts amid the Civil War and Reconstruction have been especially understudied and misunderstood.
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper's Civil War and Reconstruction explores how this major African American author-activist claimed the book's nation-shaking moments as her own. Author Eric Gardner places a longitudinal sense of Harper's novels, poems, essays, and sketches published during these years alongside the fullest investigation to date of her lecturing career, and explores how she crisscrossed the nation-lecturing in locations from Maine to Florida to Kansas-to advocate for human rights. The book thus brings exciting new insight to Harper's oratory and activism, serialized novels like Minnie's Sacrifice and Sowing and Reaping, and key poetry from Moses to Sketches of Southern Life, and it links the breadth and reach of her ideas directly to her tenacious itinerancy.EXTRA 10 % discount with code: EXTRA
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In a trans-bellum public career of over fifty years, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper fought for abolition, women's suffrage, Black suffrage, civil rights, and temperance. She fashioned a sense of literature across genre that engaged deeply with both her activism and questions of aesthetics, craft, and art. Still, while Harper was well-known during her lifetime, many twentieth-century critics dismissed or ignored her. Even amid interest spurred by a new generation of scholars, Harper has often been reduced to an abolitionist poet who later, decades after emancipation, published a notable novel. Her massive efforts amid the Civil War and Reconstruction have been especially understudied and misunderstood.
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper's Civil War and Reconstruction explores how this major African American author-activist claimed the book's nation-shaking moments as her own. Author Eric Gardner places a longitudinal sense of Harper's novels, poems, essays, and sketches published during these years alongside the fullest investigation to date of her lecturing career, and explores how she crisscrossed the nation-lecturing in locations from Maine to Florida to Kansas-to advocate for human rights. The book thus brings exciting new insight to Harper's oratory and activism, serialized novels like Minnie's Sacrifice and Sowing and Reaping, and key poetry from Moses to Sketches of Southern Life, and it links the breadth and reach of her ideas directly to her tenacious itinerancy.
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