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Families and Freedom
A Documentary History of African-American Kinship in the Civil War Era
Edited by Ira Berlin and Leslie S. Rowland
paperback
$16.95
A sequel to the award-winning Free At Last that includes moving letters from freed slaves to their families
These poignant letters show the devotion and love that existed among African American relatives despite all efforts to destroy slave families. A revealing history about the precarious state of black families during and after the Civil War.
-- Kirkus Reviews
Drawn from the work of award-winning Freedmen and Southern Society Project at the University of Maryland, Families and Freedom tells the story of the remaking of the black family during the tumultuous years of the Civil War era. Through the dramatic and moving letters and testimony of freed slaves, the documents in Families and Freedom provide deep insight into the most intimate aspects of the transformation of slaves to free people. This book is the sequel to the 1994 Lincoln Prize winner Free at Last, which was described in the New York Times as "this generation's most significant encounter with the American past."
Ira Berlin and Leslie S. Rowland, editors of Free at Last (The New Press), teach history at the University of Maryland. They are former and present directors, respectively, of the Freedmen and Southern Society Project, which is compiling a multivolume documentary history of the transition from slavery to freedom.
History / African American Studies
Spring 1998
paperback
6 1/8 x 9 1/4, 288 pages
978-1-56584-440-7
Spring 1998
paperback
6 1/8 x 9 1/4, 288 pages
978-1-56584-440-7
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