Search Books
Nathan Hale: The Life and D… Persona: A Biography of Yuk…

Writing for Justice: Victor Séjour, the Kidnapping of Edgardo Mortara, and the Age of Transatlantic Emancipations (Re-Mapping the Transnational: A Dartmouth Series in American Studies)

Author Mortara, Elèna
Publisher Dartmouth
Category Biography & Autobiography
📄 Viewing lite version Full site ›
🌎 Shop on Amazon — choose country
5.90 40.00 USD
🛒 Buy New on Amazon 🇺🇸

✓ In Stock.

Share:
Book Details
PublisherDartmouth
ISBN / ASIN161168790X
ISBN-139781611687903
AvailabilityIn Stock.
Sales Rank4,443,809
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

Winner of the 2016 American Studies Network Book Prize

In Writing for Justice, El na Mortara presents a richly layered study of the cultural and intellectual atmosphere of mid-nineteenth-century Europe and the United States, through close readings of the life and work of Victor S jour, an expat American Creole from New Orleans living in Paris. In addition to writing The Mulatto, an early story on slavery in Saint-Domingue, S jour penned La Tireuse de cartes (The Fortune-Teller, 1859), a popular play based on the famed Mortara case. In this historical incident, Pope Pius IX kidnapped Edgardo Mortara, the child of a Jewish family living in the Papal States. The details of the play s production and its reception on both sides of the Atlantic are intertwined with the events of the Italian Risorgimento and of pre Civil War America. Writing for Justice is full of surprising encounters with French and American writers and historical figures, including Hugo, Hawthorne, Twain, Napoleon III, Garibaldi, and Lincoln. As El na Mortara passionately argues, the enormous amount of public attention received by the case reveals an era of underappreciated transatlantic intellectual exchange, in which an African American writer used notions of emancipation in religious as well as racial terms, linking the plight of blacks in America to that of Jews in Europe, and to the larger battles for freedom and nationhood advancing across the continent.

This book will appeal both to general readers and to scholars, including historians, literary critics, and specialists in African American studies, Jewish, Catholic, or religious studies, multilingual American literature, francophone literature, theatrical life, nineteenth-century European politics, and cross-cultural encounters.
Random Variables
View
Personal Diary of Admiral the Lord Louis Mountbatten S…
View
Jesus of Nazareth
View
I Dream of Madonna: Women's Dreams of the Goddess of P…
View
'TIS
View
Now and in time to be: Ireland & the Irish
View
Freak or Unique: The Chris Evans Story
View
Home Truths: Life Around My Father
View
Fenian Fire
View