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Raising Freedom's Child: Black Children and Visions of the Future After Slavery (American History and Culture Series)
Raising Freedom's Child: Black Children and Visions of the Future After Slavery (American History and Culture Series)
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Buy New: $49.00
Buy New/Used from $49.00

Sales Rank: 1032080
Category: Book

Author: Mary Niall Mitchell
Publisher: New York University Press
Studio: New York University Press
Manufacturer: New York University Press
Label: New York University Press
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 336
Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3
Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.2 x 1.1

ISBN: 0814757197
Dewey Decimal Number: 371.82996073075
EAN: 9780814757192
ASIN: 0814757197

Publication Date: March 1, 2008
Release Date: April 1, 2008
Shipping: Eligible for Super Saver Shipping
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

Mitchell’s sophisticated, nuanced reading of a wealth of previously untapped documents and period photographs casts a dazzling, fresh light on the way that abolitionists, educators, missionaries, planters, politicians, and free children of color envisioned the status of African Americans after emancipation.
?Steven Mintz, University of Houston



Raising Freedom’s Child demonstrates the importance of childhood studies for understanding the nation’s political, economic, and social history. In this carefully researched book, Mitchell keeps the black child at the center of the struggle to define freedom in the aftermath of Civil War and emancipation.
?Marie Jenkins Schwartz, University of Rhode Island



The end of slavery in the United States inspired conflicting visions of the future for all Americans in the nineteenth century, black and white, slave and free. The black child became a figure upon which people projected their hopes and fears about slavery s abolition. As a member of the first generation of African Americans raised in freedom, the black child?freedom s child?offered up the possibility that blacks might soon enjoy the same privileges as whites: landownership, equality, autonomy. Yet for most white southerners, this vision was unwelcome, even frightening. Many northerners, too, expressed doubts about the consequences of abolition for the nation and its identity as a white republic.



From the 1850s and the Civil War to emancipation and the official end of Reconstruction in 1877, Raising Freedom’s Child examines slave emancipation and opposition to it as a far-reaching, national event with profound social, political, and cultural consequences. Mary Niall Mitchell analyzes multiple views of the black child?in letters, photographs, newspapers, novels, and court cases?to demonstrate how Americans contested and defended slavery and its abolition.



With each chapter, Mitchell narrates an episode in the lives of freedom s children, from debates over their education and labor to the future of racial classification and American citizenship. Raising Freedom s Child illustrates how intensely the image of the black child captured the imaginations of many Americans during the upheavals of the Civil War era. Through public struggles over the black child, Mitchell argues, Americans by turns challenged and reinforced the racial inequality fostered under slavery in the United States. Only with the triumph of segregation in public schools in 1877 did the black child lose her central role in the national debate over civil rights, a role she would not play again until the 1950s.




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