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| Subjects: History, African American Studies |
| Part of the Early American Places Series |
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Pennsylvania contained the largest concentration of early America’s abolitionist leaders and organizations, making it a necessary and illustrative stage from which to understand how national conversations about the place of free blacks in early America originated and evolved, and, importantly, the role that colonization—supporting the emigration of free and emancipated blacks to Africa—played in national and international antislavery movements. Beverly C. Tomek’s meticulous exploration of the archives of the American Colonization Society, Pennsylvania’s abolitionist societies, and colonizationist leaders (both black and white) enables her to boldly and innovatively demonstrate that, in Philadelphia at least, the American Colonization Society often worked closely with other antislavery groups to further the goals of the abolitionist movement. In Colonization and Its Discontents, Tomek brings a much-needed examination of the complexity of the colonization movement by describing in depth the difference between those who supported colonization for political and social reasons and those who supported it for religious and humanitarian reasons. Finally, she puts the black perspective on emigration into the broader picture instead of treating black nationalism as an isolated phenomenon and examines its role in influencing the black abolitionist agenda. |
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| “Tomek offers a brilliant and provocative analysis of the antislavery network. This work is an extraordinary contribution to the historical understanding of American colonization.”
| | -Orville Vernon Burton, author of The Age of Lincoln |
| | “Colonization and Its Discontents challenges historians of the antebellum period to reconsider basic questions—questions about distinctions between abolitionist versus antislavery, between immediatist versus gradualist, and between competing versions of African colonization. By concentrating on the full spectrum of antislavery ideology within a single state and by questioning long-held assumptions, Tomek offers an expansive and revealing analysis of the antislavery impulse.” | | -James Brewer Stewart, James Wallace Professor of History, Emeritus, Macalester College |
| | "An enlightening examination of the role of colonization in the state and national controversies over slavery, abolition, and civil rights in antebellum America." | | -Nicholas Wood, Pennsylvania History |
| | "Tomek's book constitutes an important contribution to the history of the nineteenth-century antislavery movement." | | -Friederike Baer, American Historical Review |
| | "Colonization and Its Discontents is an interesting and useful contribution to the ever-growing historiography of nineteenth-century American antislavery movements." | | -Erica Armstrong Dunbar, Pennsylvania Magazine of History of Biography |
| | "This is a much-needed addition to the growing body of scholarship dedicated to the nineteenth-century colonization movement." | | -The Register of the Kentucky Historical Society |
| "Colonization and Its Discontents is a well-researched and welcome reexamination of a movement that defies easy definition." | | -Journal of American History |
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