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This book shows how advocates for women's rights, in the absence of their "own" history, used the antislavery movement as a historical reference point and model. It will be of interest to cultural and literary historians of nineteenth-century abolition, the abolitionist movement, women's history, and transatlantic reform culture. This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.
List of contents
List of Figures; Acknowledgements; List of abbreviations; Introduction; 1. From Transnational Movement to Global Memory: Abolitionism and the Culture of Reform; 2. Fictions, 1832-1852: Sentimental Antislavery and the Sisterhood; 3. Archives, c. 1848: Parisian Calls for 'Universal Emancipation'; 4. Periodicals, 1866-1914: Slavery and the Woman Question; 5. Histories, 1881-1914: Feminist Internationalists and the Antislavery Origin Myth; Concluding Remarks; Bibliography; Index.
About the author
Sophie van den Elzen is Lecturer in the Department of Languages, Literature and Communication at Utrecht University. She is a specialist on the interrelationships of social movements, culture, and memory.
Summary
In this book, Sophie van den Elzen shows how advocates for women's rights, in the absence of their 'own' history, used the antislavery movement as a historical reference point and model. Through a detailed analysis of a wide range of sources produced over the span of almost a century, including novels, journals, speeches, pamphlets, and posters, van den Elzen reveals how the women's movement gradually diverged from a position of solidarity with the enslaved into one of opposition, based on hierarchical assumptions about class and race. This inclusive cultural survey provides a new understanding of the ways in which the cultural memory of Anglo-American antislavery was imported and adapted across Europe and the Atlantic world, and it breaks new ground in studying the “woman-slave analogy” from a longitudinal and transnational comparative perspective. This title is also available as open access on Cambridge Core.
Foreword
An exploration of how the international women's movement made the history of antislavery part of its usable past.