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African Americans in literature --- Afro-Americans in literature --- Afro-Amerikanen in de literatuur --- Afro-Américains dans la littérature --- Amerikaanse zwarten in de literatuur --- Autobiografie --- Autobiographie --- Autobiography --- Black Americans in literature --- Johnson, James Weldon, 1871-1938. The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured Man --- Narration (Rhetoric) --- Narration (Rhétorique) --- Narrative writing --- Negroes in literature --- Noirs américains dans la littérature --- Verhaal (Retoriek) --- Washington, Booker Taliaferro, 1856-1915. Up from Slavery --- Wright, Richard, 1908-1960. Black Boy --- Zwarte Amerikanen in de literatuur --- American prose literature --- Prose américaine --- -Autobiographies --- Prose américaine --- African Americans --- -African Americans --- -African Americans in literature --- -Autobiography --- -Afro-Americans in literature --- Narrative (Rhetoric) --- Autobiographies --- Egodocuments --- Memoirs --- Afro-Americans --- Black Americans --- Colored people (United States) --- Negroes --- Biography --- -History and criticism --- Historiography --- African American authors --- History and criticism --- Technique --- Rhetoric --- Discourse analysis, Narrative --- Narratees (Rhetoric) --- Biography as a literary form --- American literature --- Africans --- Ethnology --- Blacks --- Noirs américains --- Noirs américains dans la littérature --- Narration --- Biographie --- Histoire et critique --- Historiographie --- Auteurs noirs américains --- Prose literature --- American authors --- Du Bois, William Edward Burghardt --- Ellison, Ralph Waldo --- Black people --- -Biography --- NOIRS AMERICAINS --- Noirs américains --- NARRATION --- AUTOBIOGRAPHIE --- VIE INTELLECTUELLE --- HISTORIOGRAPHIE --- BIOGRAPHIE --- HISTOIRE ET CRITIQUE --- Dans la littérature
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Hurston, Zora Neale, 1901-1960. Jonah's Gourd Vine --- Literatuur en folklore --- Littérature et folklore --- African Americans in literature --- African Americans --- American literature --- Study and teaching (Higher) --- Intellectual life --- African American authors --- History and criticism --- Literature and folklore --- Hughes, Langston --- Criticism and interpretation --- Ellison, Ralph Waldo --- Study and teaching --- Douglass, Frederick --- Afro-Americans in literature --- Negroes in literature --- Afro-Americans --- Black Americans --- Colored people (United States) --- Negroes --- Africans --- Ethnology --- Blacks --- English literature --- Agrarians (Group of writers) --- Black people --- Afro-american literature
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No book more vividly explains the horror of American slavery and the emotional impetus behind the antislavery movement than Frederick Douglass' Narrative. In an introductory essay, Robert Stepto re-examines the extraordinary life and achievement of a man who escaped from slavery to become a leading abolitionist and one of America's most important writers. The John Harvard Library text reproduces the first edition, published in Boston in 1845.
African American abolitionists --- Abolitionists --- Slaves --- Douglass, Frederick, --- Bailey, Frederick Augustus Washington, --- Bailey, Freddie, --- Bailey, Fred, --- Baly, Frederick Augustus Washington, --- Slaves' writings, American. --- BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY --- American slaves' writings --- American literature --- Historical. --- Slaves' writings, American --- E-books --- American enslaved persons' writings --- Enslaved persons --- Enslaved persons' writings, American.
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"The Life and the Adventures of a Haunted Convict is a rare and original autobiography, a first-person account of a young black man's life as an indentured servant, a juvenile delinquent, and a prisoner in New York State in the mid-nineteenth century. Austin Reed was born a free man near Rochester, NY in the 1820s. As a young adult, he was sent to a juvenile reform school in Manhattan, where he learned to read and write. In the decades that followed, Reed would be repeatedly incarcerated for theft in a state prison in Auburn. It was there that he began to write this memoir, which explores America's first reformatory and first industrial prison from an inmate's point of view, and the great cruelties and kindnesses he experienced in those places, excavating patterns of racial segregation, exploitation, and bondage extending beyond the boundaries of the slaveholding South, into free New York. A work of uncommon, haunting beauty, this is a major historical document that transforms our understanding of nineteenth-century history and literature"--
Reed, Austin, --- United States --- United States --- Social conditions --- Race relations --- History
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