The first full-length study of Frederick Douglass' visit to Scotland in 1846
Frederick Douglass (1818-95) was not the only fugitive from American slavery to visit Scotland before the Civil War, but he was the best known and his impact was far-reaching. This book shows that addressing crowded halls from Ayr to Aberdeen, he gained the confidence, mastered the skills and fashioned the distinctive voice that transformed him as a campaigner. It tells how Douglass challenged the Free Church over its ties with the Southern plantocracy; how he exploited his knowledge of Walter Scott and Robert Burns to brilliant effect; and how he asserted control over his own image at a time when racial science and blackface minstrel shows were beginning to shape his audiences' perceptions. He arrived as a subordinate envoy of white abolitionists, legally still enslaved. He returned home as a free man ready to embark on a new stage of his career, as editor and proprietor of his own newspaper and a leader in his own right.
Key Features:
First full-length study of Frederick Douglass' visit to Scotland in 1846Reveals fresh information about, and deepens our understanding of, a major 19th-century intellectual at a crucial stage in his political and professional developmentSubjects Douglass' speeches and letters to close readings and situates them in the immediate context of their delivery and compositionDemonstrates the extent to which Douglass was closely acquainted with Scottish literature, history and current affairsEnhances our knowledge of Douglass as a performer, his ability to read audiences, and how he moved and influenced them
Rezensionen / Stimmen
Frederick Douglass and Scotland is an ambitious and highly original work that is an exciting new addition to the historiography. It addresses both the need for more recognition of Douglass in Scottish historiography, and also of Scotland in studies of Douglass in the United States. It is thoroughly researched, and the author does an impressive of using source material to reveal Douglass's visit to Scotland as a truly transformative episode in the abolitionist's life. -- Shaun Wallace, University of Bristol * History Scotland * The seminal nature of the transatlantic sojourn of Frederick Douglass is now acknowledged by all but the most one-eyed of African American studies scholars and Alasdair Pettinger's groundbreaking work on Douglass in Scotland from the late 1990s has been pivotal to that movement...Pettinger's masterly study of his epochal visit to Scotland fills in some of those gaps with a comprehensively researched treatment of topics such as phrenology, his interest in photography, blackface minstrelsy and centrally the Free Church of Scotland and Douglass's "Send Back the Money" campaign that was so important to his maturation as an independent political figure. -- Alan Rice, University of Central Lancashire * Journal of American Studies * We have long known about the significance of Frederick Douglass's visit to Britain and his activities in Scotland in 1846, but Pettinger calls on us to look beyond what we know, and in doing so takes us on an exciting intellectual excursion at the end of which we are left with a much deeper understanding of the ways those months spent in Scotland helped to sculpt the man who is now recognized as one of the great figures of 19th century history. * Richard Blackett, Vanderbilt University * This book is an indispensable companion to studies in Scottish abolitionism and a welcome addition to anyone's library with interests in Scottish church history and transatlantic networks. -- Andrew M. Jones, Kennesaw State University * Scottish Church History *
Sprache
Verlagsort
Zielgruppe
Produkt-Hinweis
Broschur/Paperback
Klebebindung
Illustrationen
31 black and white illustrations
Maße
Höhe: 229 mm
Breite: 155 mm
Dicke: 23 mm
Gewicht
ISBN-13
978-1-4744-4426-2 (9781474444262)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Alasdair Pettinger studied at the Universities of Birmingham and Essex, completing his PhD in Literature in 1988 while working as a civil servant in London. Since 1992, he has been based in Glasgow, working at the Scottish Music Centre and pursuing his academic interests as an independent scholar. He has held visiting research fellowships at the University of Central Lancashire (2000), Nottingham Trent University (2004-2007) and the University of Liverpool (2010-2013). He is the editor of Always Elsewhere: Travels of the Black Atlantic (1998), and has published a number of essays reflecting his (overlapping) interests in travel literature, the cultures of slavery and abolitionism, and representations of Haiti.
Autor*in
Independent scholarScottish Music Centre
Part I: The Voyage
'Throw Him Overboard'
The Making of a Fugitive
'Put Them in Irons'
Part II: Dark, Polluted Gold
Electric Speed
That Ticklish Possession
The Free Church Responds
The Price of Freedom
The Genealogy of Money
Gilded Cages
Part III: Douglass, Scott and Burns
'One of Scotland's Many Famous Names'
A Wild Proposition
New Relations and Duties
A Visit to Ayr
The Coward Slave and the Poor Negro Driver
Crooked Paths
The Sons and Daughters of Old Scotia
Part IV: Measuring Heads, Reading Faces
Breakfast with Combe
The Physiological Century
Travelling Phrenologically
A Glut of Ethiopians
Douglass on Stage
The Suit and the Engraving
Part V: The Voyage Home
A Disconnected Farewell
Cabin 72
Never Again
Part VI: The Affinity Scot
Recitals of Blood
Choosing Ancestors
Remembering Douglass
Out of My Place