Keyword [slave] Result: 161 - 180 | Page: 9 of 10 |
| 161. | Re -forming the past: Aesthetics, politics, and the African American postmodern slave narrative |
| 162. | Three generations of planter-businessmen: The Tayloes, slave labor, and entrepreneurialism in Virginia, 1710--1830 |
| 163. | Toiling in the Empire: Labor in three Anglo-Atlantic ports, London, Philadelphia and Cape Coast Castle, 1750-1783 |
| 164. | An American planter: Slavery, entrepreneurship, and identity in the life of Stephen Duncan, 1787-1867 |
| 165. | A colony of citizens: Revolution and slave emancipation in the French Caribbean, 1789-1802 |
| 166. | Whose story is it? A rhetorical analysis of American women's slave narratives in fact and fiction |
| 167. | 'He Gwine Sing He Country': Africans, Afro-Virginians, and the development of slave culture in Virginia, 1690-1810 |
| 168. | History, language, and image/identity in selected works of women of the diaspora: Mary Prince a West Indian slave, Toni Morrison, Alice Walker, and Paule Marshall |
| 169. | 'The middle passage never guessed its end': Slave subjectivity and black subjectivity in contemporary African American and Anglophone Caribbean literature |
| 170. | Rethinking the slave narrative: Domestic concerns in Henry Bibb and William and Ellen Craft |
| 171. | The mulatta text and the muted voice in 'Louisa Picquet, the Octoroon': Revising the genre of the slave narrative |
| 172. | The role of the engaging narrator in four nineteenth-century American slave narratives |
| 173. | A study of African American slave narratives as a source for a contemporary, constructive black theology |
| 174. | Gender and the subjugated body: Readings of race, subjectivity, and difference in the construction of slave narratives |
| 175. | Subjects of slavery, agents of history: Women and power in female gothic novels and slave narratives, 1790-1865 |
| 176. | Voice in the slave narratives of Olaudah Equiano, Frederick Douglass, and Solomon Northrup |
| 177. | The antebellum slave narrative and American literature |
| 178. | The slave society in eighteenth-century Sabara: A community study in colonial Brazil |
| 179. | MEMORY SONGS: COMMUNITY, FLIGHT AND CONFLICT IN THE BIG DRUM CEREMONY OF CARRIACOU, GRENADA (CARIBBEAN, RITUAL, SLAVE DANCE, BLACK, AFRICAN, MYTH, ETHNOMUSICOLOGY) |
| 180. | SLAVERY AND CONVERSION: AN ANALYSIS OF EX-SLAVE TESTIMONY (AFRO-AMERICAN, CHRISTIANITY, BLACK, SOCIAL ETHICS, RELIGIOUS EXPERIENCE) |
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