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Reading Pleasures

Everyday Black Living in Early America

Tara A. Bynum
Barcode 9780252044731
Hardback

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Original price £107.34 - Original price £107.34
Original price
£107.34
£107.34 - £107.34
Current price £107.34

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Release Date: 10/01/2023

Genre: Society & Culture
Sub-Genre: Social Sciences
Label: University of Illinois Press
Series: New Black Studies Series
Language: English
Publisher: University of Illinois Press
Pages: 184

Everyday Black Living in Early America. In the early United States, a Black person committed an act of resistance simply by reading and writing. Yet we overlook that these activities also brought pleasure. Tara A. Bynum tells the compelling stories of four early American writers who expressed feeling good despite living while enslaved or only nominally free. The poet Phillis Wheatley delights in writing letters to a friend. Ministers John Marrant and James Albert Ukawsaw Gronniosaw memorialize their love for God. David Walker’s pamphlets ask Black Americans to claim their victory over slavery. Together, their writings reflect the joyous, if messy, humanity inside each of them. This proof of a thriving interior self in pursuit of good feeling forces us to reckon with the fact that Black lives do matter.

A daring assertion of Black people’s humanity, Reading Pleasures reveals how four Black writers experienced positive feelings and analyzes the ways these emotions served creative, political, and racialized ends.