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The Practice of Citizenship: Black Politics and Print Culture in the Early United States
Contributor(s): Spires, Derrick R. (Author)
ISBN: 081225080X     ISBN-13: 9780812250800
Publisher: University of Pennsylvania Press
OUR PRICE:   $56.95  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: March 2019
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Literary Criticism | Subjects & Themes - Politics
- Social Science | Ethnic Studies - African American Studies
- Literary Criticism | American - African American
Dewey: 323.119
LCCN: 2018033304
Physical Information: 1.3" H x 6.2" W x 9.1" (1.55 lbs) 352 pages
Themes:
- Ethnic Orientation - African American
 
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Publisher Description:

In the years between the American Revolution and the U.S. Civil War, as legal and cultural understandings of citizenship became more racially restrictive, black writers articulated an expansive, practice-based theory of citizenship. Grounded in political participation, mutual aid, critique and revolution, and the myriad daily interactions between people living in the same spaces, citizenship, they argued, is not defined by who one is but, rather, by what one does.

In The Practice of Citizenship, Derrick R. Spires examines the parallel development of early black print culture and legal and cultural understandings of U.S. citizenship, beginning in 1787, with the framing of the federal Constitution and the founding of the Free African Society by Absalom Jones and Richard Allen, and ending in 1861, with the onset of the Civil War. Between these two points he recovers understudied figures such as William J. Wilson, whose 1859 Afric-American Picture Gallery appeared in seven installments in The Anglo-African Magazine, and the physician, abolitionist, and essayist James McCune Smith. He places texts such as the proceedings of black state conventions alongside considerations of canonical figures such as Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and Frederick Douglass.

Reading black print culture as a space where citizenship was both theorized and practiced, Spires reveals the degree to which concepts of black citizenship emerged through a highly creative and diverse community of letters, not easily reducible to representative figures or genres. From petitions to Congress to Frances Harper's parlor fiction, black writers framed citizenship both explicitly and implicitly, the book demonstrates, not simply as a response to white supremacy but as a matter of course in the shaping of their own communities and in meeting their own political, social, and cultural needs.