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Black Walden: Slavery and Its Aftermath in Concord, Massachusetts
by Lemire, Elise | HC | Good
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“Former library book; Pages can have notes/highlighting. Spine may show signs of wear. ~ ”... Read moreabout condition
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Located in: Aurora, Illinois, United States
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eBay item number:145770223838
Item specifics
- Condition
- Good
- Seller Notes
- Binding
- Hardcover
- Weight
- 1 lbs
- Product Group
- Book
- IsTextBook
- No
- ISBN
- 0812241800
- Publication Year
- 2009
- Type
- Textbook
- Format
- Hardcover
- Language
- English
- Subject Area
- Biography & Autobiography, Literary Criticism, History, Social Science
- Publication Name
- Black Walden : Slavery and Its Aftermath in Concord, Massachusetts
- Item Length
- 9 in
- Publisher
- University of Pennsylvania Press
- Item Width
- 6 in
- Subject
- Slavery, United States / 19th Century, American / General, Customs & Traditions, Historical, United States / General
- Number of Pages
- 256 Pages
About this product
Product Information
Charting the rise and fall of a community of former slaves struggling to survive on the fringes of Concord, Massachusetts, Black Walden reveals the role that slavery and its aftermath played in forming Thoreau's beloved Walden landscape.
Product Identifiers
Publisher
University of Pennsylvania Press
ISBN-10
0812241800
ISBN-13
9780812241808
eBay Product ID (ePID)
71709280
Product Key Features
Publication Name
Black Walden : Slavery and Its Aftermath in Concord, Massachusetts
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Subject
Slavery, United States / 19th Century, American / General, Customs & Traditions, Historical, United States / General
Publication Year
2009
Type
Textbook
Subject Area
Biography & Autobiography, Literary Criticism, History, Social Science
Number of Pages
256 Pages
Dimensions
Item Length
9 in
Item Width
6 in
Additional Product Features
LCCN
2009-001010
Lc Classification Number
F74.C8l46 2009
Reviews
"Thanks to Lemire's ingenious research, such valiant figures as Brister Freeman and Cato Ingraham can claim their just place alongside the more famous Minutemen in the town that fired the 'shot heard 'round the world.'"--Robert Gross, author ofThe Minutemen and Their World, "Walden Pond in Concord, Massachusetts, is most famous as the place where Henry David Thoreau went to 'live deliberately' and subsist on the land. Lemire . . . sets about to resurrect the memory of not only the freedmen and -women who dwelled there but also the history of slavery in Concord. . . . Ultimately, Lemire conveys the idea that before Walden Pond was a 'green space,' it was, in fact, a 'black space.'"- Library Journal, "Thanks to Lemire's ingenious research, such valiant figures as Brister Freeman and Cato Ingraham can claim their just place alongside the more famous Minutemen in the town that fired the 'shot heard 'round the world.'"-Robert Gross, author of The Minutemen and Their World, "Elise Lemire has written an elegantly researched, deeply insightful, and eminently readable history of the embattled black families in New England's most celebrated town from the Revolutionary era to the heyday of the Transcendentalists. It is certain to be of the greatest interest not only to scholars across the entire interdiscipline of American studies but also to any and all readers interested in the tangled history of race in America."--Lawrence Buell, author ofNew England Literary Culture, "Lemire has unearthed an astonishing amount of detailed information about more than a dozen African and African American slaves and the interconnected white families who built their fortunes and genteel reputations on their backs. . . . A beautifully written, fascinating, and challenging piece of historical detective work."--Joanne Pope Melish, Journal of the Civil War Era, "Capturing the social texture of an eighteenth-century Massachusetts community, Black Walden is a useful contribution to studies of New England slavery, Massachusetts history, and African American life. . . . [O]ut of a short excerpt from Henry David Thoreau's Walden , Lemire has put together an engrossing portrait of slaveholders and the freed people in Concord."-- Journal of African American History, "Lemire has unearthed an astonishing amount of detailed information about more than a dozen African and African American slaves and the interconnected white families who built their fortunes and genteel reputations on their backs. . . . A beautifully written, fascinating, and challenging piece of historical detective work."-Joanne Pope Melish, Journal of the Civil War Era, "Walden Pond in Concord, Massachusetts, is most famous as the place where Henry David Thoreau went to 'live deliberately' and subsist on the land. Lemire . . . sets about to resurrect the memory of not only the freedmen and -women who dwelled there but also the history of slavery in Concord. . . . Ultimately, Lemire conveys the idea that before Walden Pond was a 'green space,' it was, in fact, a 'black space.'"-- Library Journal, "Thanks to Lemire's ingenious research, such valiant figures as Brister Freeman and Cato Ingraham can claim their just place alongside the more famous Minutemen in the town that fired the 'shot heard 'round the world.'"--Robert Gross, author of The Minutemen and Their World, "Elise Lemire has written an elegantly researched, deeply insightful, and eminently readable history of the embattled black families in New England's most celebrated town from the Revolutionary era to the heyday of the Transcendentalists. It is certain to be of the greatest interest not only to scholars across the entire interdiscipline of American studies but also to any and all readers interested in the tangled history of race in America."--Lawrence Buell, author of New England Literary Culture, "This small but important study shines light on Africans in Massachusetts as both slaves and freeman. . . . The life of Concord's Africans in and out of slavery was one of prejudice, submission, abandonment, poverty, and absence of earthily rewards. . . . Essential."-- Choice, "Elise Lemire has written an elegantly researched, deeply insightful, and eminently readable history of the embattled black families in New England's most celebrated town from the Revolutionary era to the heyday of the Transcendentalists. It is certain to be of the greatest interest not only to scholars across the entire interdiscipline of American studies but also to any and all readers interested in the tangled history of race in America."-Lawrence Buell, author of New England Literary Culture, "Lemire has put together an engrossing portrait of slaveholders and the freed people in Concord."-- Journal of African American History, "Lemire has genuinely enriched our understanding not only of the history of Concord but also of the country for which that fabled town still so often stands."- New England Quarterly, "[B]reathtaking. . . . Lemire's meticulous and inspired archival research shows that 'Concord, Massachusetts, of all places, was a slave town.' . . . Imaginative and moral generosity, to both the black and the white eighteenth and early nineteenth century Concordians whose intimately entangled fortunes she chronicles, is a hallmark of her study. At the same time, Lemire is clear-eyed and clear-voiced about the facts and meanings of inter-racial Concord's 'long and brutal history.'"- American Literary History, "Capturing the social texture of an eighteenth-century Massachusetts community, Black Walden is a useful contribution to studies of New England slavery, Massachusetts history, and African American life. . . . [O]ut of a short excerpt from Henry David Thoreau's Walden , Lemire has put together an engrossing portrait of slaveholders and the freed people in Concord."- Journal of African American History, "This small but important study shines light on Africans in Massachusetts as both slaves and freeman. . . . The life of Concord's Africans in and out of slavery was one of prejudice, submission, abandonment, poverty, and absence of earthily rewards. . . . Essential."- Choice, "Lemire has genuinely enriched our understanding not only of the history of Concord but also of the country for which that fabled town still so often stands."-- New England Quarterly, "[B]reathtaking. . . . Lemire's meticulous and inspired archival research shows that 'Concord, Massachusetts, of all places, was a slave town.' . . . Imaginative and moral generosity, to both the black and the white eighteenth and early nineteenth century Concordians whose intimately entangled fortunes she chronicles, is a hallmark of her study. At the same time, Lemire is clear-eyed and clear-voiced about the facts and meanings of inter-racial Concord's 'long and brutal history.'"-- American Literary History
Table of Content
Introduction: The Memory of These Human Inhabitants Chapter 1. Squire Cuming Chapter 2. The Codman Place Chapter 3. British Grenadiers Chapter 4. The Last of the Race Departed Chapter 5. Permission to Live in Walden Woods Chapter 6. Little Gardens and Dwellings Chapter 7. Concord Keeps its Ground Epilogue: Brister Freeman's Hill Dramatis Personae Notes Bibliography Index Acknowledgments
Copyright Date
2009
Target Audience
College Audience
Dewey Decimal
974.4/4
Dewey Edition
22
Illustrated
Yes
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