2015
DOI: 10.1017/s0040557415000046
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“Most Fitting Companions”: Making Mixed-Race Bodies Visible in Antebellum Public Spaces

Abstract: In the years leading up to the U.S. Civil War, free and fugitive persons of color were aware of the need to frame how they were seen in their everyday lives as part of an arsenal of rhetorical strategies to attract audiences to the abolitionist cause. In this article, I examine three spatial contexts that nineteenth-century mixed-race persons navigated for abolitionist ends in which their hybrid bodies were featured as an aspect of their public performances. These locations—Britain's imperially sponsored Cryst… Show more

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Cited by 13 publications
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