Sentences with phrase «american abolitionist»

The parting of the Red Sea, the Crucifixion, the hanging of the American abolitionist John Brown, and the American Civil War, for example, are depicted by Furnas in dramatic scenes that combine figuration with abstraction.
Named for African - American abolitionist and women's rights activist Sojourner Truth, Parsons paints strong female characters, like the scintillating, silhouetted figure smoking in the darkness in her large - scale work Anthony at Night with the butterflies (2016).
May 23 - August 4, 2013 In the 31 panels making up the Harriet Tubman series, Lawrence masterfully combined image and text to recount the life of this heroic American abolitionist, who helped more than 300 slaves reach freedom by way of the Underground Railroad.
Over 150 years ago, during the Civil War, the great American abolitionist Frederick Douglass gave a speech titled «Pictures and Progress,» which spoke to the ways in which images shaped our understanding of life.
The work depicts David Walker, an African - American abolitionist famous for the pamphlet «Appeal to the Coloured Citizens of the World» (1829), which urged slaves to revolt and fight for their freedom.
Born a Slave, Frederick Douglass became an American abolitionist, women's suffragist, editor, orator, statemen and reformer.
Other African - Americans with busts or statues are the late African - American abolitionist and author Frederick Douglass and the late civil rights leader Martin Luther King, Jr..
She was an American abolitionist who treated the Union Army as a surgeon during the Civil War.
A similar testimony is provided by another African - American abolitionist — William Wells Brown (1814 - 1884).
A few minutes away is the National Historic Site that preserves the last home of Frederick Douglass, the great American abolitionist, writer, and statesman.
The reaction is hardly a new one: abolitionist John Greenleaf Whittier wrote to Sarah and Angelina Grimke, early American abolitionists and advocates of women's rights, about their concern for women: «Is it not forgetting the great and dreadful wrongs of the slave in a selfish crusade against some paltry grievance of [your] own?»
Religion News Service: PBS series depicts American abolitionists as fired by faith As the nation marks the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation, PBS premieres «The Abolitionists,» a three - part series, on Tuesday (Jan. 8).
Professor Lubet's latest book is The «Colored Hero» of Harper's Ferry: John Anthony Copeland and the War against Slavery (Cambridge University Press, 2015), which tells the stories of the African - American abolitionists who joined John Brown's attempt to free the slaves of Virginia.

Not exact matches

For example, Moses Stuart of Andover Seminary in Massachusetts (who was sympathetic to the eventual emancipation of American slaves, but was against abolition), published a tract in which he pointed to Ephesians 6 and other biblical texts to argue that while slaves should be treated fairly by their owners, abolitionists just didn't have Scripture on their side and «must give up the New Testament authority, or abandon the fiery course which they are pursuing.»
[Noll also points to arguments put forth by some abolitionists that said that while the Bible never condemns slavery per se, it does condemn the kind of slavery practiced in the American South.
To these one might add such instances as the constitutional protection of slavery which led some radical abolitionists to repudiate that document; the massive violation of civil liberties during World War I; and the internment of Japanese - American citizens during World War II.
Douglass (1817 - 1895) was an African American Methodist Episcopal Zion (AME Zion) clergyman who was born into slavery and who escaped from slavery and joined the abolitionists» struggle as an internationally known orator, fund raiser, newspaper publisher, and editor.
Thus, for the African newly chained to the deck of a ship anchored at a West African harbor, the meaning of liberation and the character of the struggle are very different from that of the African - American who, three generations later, like Frederick Douglass and William Wells Brown, must consider how best to conduct an abolitionist campaign.
American feminism of the 19th century was born of the abolitionist movement, and of equal significance with Friedan's book as impetus for the current women's movement was the experience of women in the civil rights and antiwar protests of the «60s.
Few capture the kidnapping, slaveholding theology of American Christianity better than former slave and abolitionist, Frederick Douglass:
In addition to «Mum Bett», OSV will feature portrayals of Abby Kelley, a 19th - century abolitionist, and William Lloyd Garrison, a founder of the American Anti-Slavery Society on Martin Luther King Jr..
Trump marked the start of African - American History Mark by once again criticizing the media for covering him unfairly while also praising famed abolitionist Frederick Douglass as «somebody who has done an amazing job and is being recognized more and more.»
Abolitionist and women's rights advocate Sojourner Truth's bust is the first sculpture to honor an African - American woman in the Capitol but is not a full statue.
Some abolitionist works like «Uncle Tom's Cabin» could paint slavery as a form of captivity, but the canonical captives of antebellum American literature were white women kidnapped by Indians, who after the Civil War were often replaced by freed slaves as objects of superstitious terror.
Film Review by Kam Williams Civil War Saga Chronicles Exploits of Confederate Soldier - Turned - Slave Revolt Leader While the slave raids led by Nat Turner and John Brown have been well documented in the annals of American history, the relatively - successful exploits of another notorious abolitionist insurrectionist have somehow slipped through the cracks.
The texts focus on different aspects of Aferican American culture and events in African American history such as the abolitionist and post-abolitionist movement.
The Liberty Bell was known as the «Independence Bell» or the «Old Yankee's Bell» until 1837, when it was adopted by the American Anti-Slavery Society as a symbol of the abolitionist movement.
Lester takes readers to Savannah, Georgia, in 1859 in a fictionalized account of the largest slave auction in American history, told in alternating voices of slaves, slave owners, and abolitionists.
The «American Colonization Society» was supported by two very different groups: abolitionists who wanted to free African slaves and their descendants and «repatriate» them, and slave owners who feared free people of color and wanted to expel them from America.
'' Join us for the unveiling of the landmark artwork, «Symphony in DC Major,» commissioned by City Market at O and created by renowned sculptor and third - generation Washingtonian, Zachary Oxman, The massive three - part sculpture, occupying an entire city block, pays tribute to Shaw's storied history, portraying prolific composer, jazz musician, and DC native Edward «Duke» Ellington; neighborhood namesake and abolitionist Union Army Colonel Robert Gould Shaw; and renowned American Expressionist painter and Shaw Junior High School art teacher, Alma Thomas.
He was laid to rest in Brooklyn's Green - Wood Cemetery, amid Civil War heroes, Abolitionists, and a number of other major American artists.
The social reformer and abolitionist Frederick Douglass was the most photographed American man of the nineteenth century.
In two works on view, Cyrus investigates the relationship between individuals and cultures at large, drawing from an archive of African - American political and cultural history that includes abolitionist John Brown, the Black Panthers, and Blaxploitation films.
The exhibition explores themes converging around feminist activists from American history, domestic ornament in service of political messages, such as Quaker abolitionist quilts and pro-Confederacy secessionist cockades, and the recent removal of Baltimore's Confederate monuments.
From the earliest Quaker abolitionist John Woolman in the 1700s to Barrack Obama in 2008 leads a thread of American thought that says that a black man or woman is equal under God and the law, and could even be President of the United States.
New York About Blog Founded by abolitionists in 1865, The Nation is America's oldest weekly magazine, serving as a critical, independent voice in American journalism.
a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z