From Homicide to Slavery: Studies in American Culture
1987; University of Pennsylvania Press; Volume: 7; Issue: 3 Linguagem: Inglês
10.2307/3123797
ISSN1553-0620
AutoresKenneth H. Winn, David Brion Davis,
Tópico(s)Race, History, and American Society
ResumoFor more than twenty years David Brion Davis has been recognized as a leading authority on the moral and ideological responses to slavery in the Western world. From Homicide to Slavery, Davis's first book of collected essays, brings together selections reflecting his wide-ranging interests in colonial history, Afro-American history, the social sciences, and American literature. The essays are interconnected by Davis's central concern with violence, irrationality, and the definition of moral limits during a period when Americans believed they were breaking free from historical constraints and acquiring new powers of self-perfection. Topics range from a socially revealing murder trial in 1843 to debates over capital punishment, movements of counter-subverison, the iconography of race, the cowboy as an American hero, the portrayal of violence in American literature, the historiography of slavery, and the British and American antislavery movements.
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