About the Series | p. iii |
About This Volume | p. vii |
List of Illustrations | p. xv |
Clotel; or, The President's Daughter: The Complete Text | p. 1 |
Introduction: Cultural and Historical Background | p. 3 |
Chronology of Brown's Life and Times | p. 29 |
A Note on the Text and Annotations | p. 44 |
Clotel; or, The President's Daughter [1853 Edition] | p. 45 |
Clotel; or, The President's Daughter: Cultural Contexts | p. 229 |
Sources and Revisions | p. 231 |
A Declaration by the Representatives of the United States of America, in General Congress Assembled | p. 238 |
from Domestic Manners of the Americans | p. 245 |
Sale of a Daughter of Tho's Jefferson | p. 246 |
Jefferson's Daughter | p. 250 |
from Letter to Frederick Douglass' Paper | p. 252 |
What to the Slave Is the Fourth of July? | p. 253 |
from Sermons Addressed to Masters and Servants | p. 258 |
Two Proclamations | p. 262 |
Weld, from American Slavery As It Is | p. 265 |
from The New Liberty Party | p. 270 |
Singular Escape | p. 271 |
The Quadroons | p. 274 |
The Quadroon's Story | p. 284 |
The Leap from the Long Bridge. An Incident at Washington | p. 297 |
from Narrative of William W. Brown | p. 299 |
from Biography of an American Bondman | p. 302 |
from Original Panoramic Views | p. 306 |
from Clotelle: A Tale of the Southern States | p. 309 |
from Clotelle; or, The Colored Heroine | p. 315 |
Race, Slavery, Prejudice | p. 328 |
from Notes on the State of Virginia | p. 335 |
Letter Exchange (1791) | p. 343 |
from Walker's Appeal | p. 348 |
from African Colonization | p. 360 |
from Review of the Debate in the Virginia Legislature | p. 365 |
from On the Reception of Abolition Petitions | p. 371 |
from An Inquiry into the Scriptural Views of Slavery | p. 374 |
Southern Customs -- Madame Chevalier | p. 379 |
Colorphobia in New York! | p. 382 |
from Types of Mankind | p. 386 |
from Diseases and Peculiarities of the Negro Race | p. 390 |
from The Constitution and the Union | p. 394 |
from Sociology for the South | p. 397 |
from A South-Side View of Slavery | p. 403 |
from The Planter's Northern Bride | p. 405 |
What Slaves Are Taught to Think of the North | p. 414 |
Prohibition of Colored Persons | p. 417 |
Resistance and Reform | p. 420 |
The Confessions of Nat Turner | p. 427 |
To the Public | p. 444 |
from An Appeal in Favor of That Class of Americans Called Africans | p. 447 |
from Appeal to the Christian Women of the South | p. 451 |
The Rights of Women | p. 456 |
I Am a Woman's Rights | p. 458 |
An Address, Delivered at the African Masonic Hall | p. 460 |
Responsibility of Colored People in the Free States | p. 467 |
The Colored People in America | p. 469 |
Address to the Slaves of the United States of America | p. 471 |
from Report of the Committee on Abolition (1847) | p. 480 |
Resolutions Adopted (1853) | p. 484 |
from Political Destiny of the Colored Race on the American Continent | p. 488 |
Declaration of Wrongs and Rights (1864) | p. 497 |
from St. Domingo: Its Revolutions and Its Patriots | p. 500 |
from A Plea for Captain John Brown | p. 503 |
Battle of Milliken's Bend | p. 509 |
from My Southern Home | p. 512 |
Selected Bibliography | p. 517 |
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