Extractions: @import url("http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/eaf/styles/eaf_advanced.css"); dqmcodebase = "/eaf/scripts/" Works in the Collection Other Resources William Wells Brown took the name Wells Brown from the man who helped him escape from slavery. An abolitionist, lecturer, and writer, Brown's works include his own Narrative of William W Brown, A Fugitive Slave and The Negro in the American Rebellion . In 1853, Brown's novel Clotel, or The President's Daughter Clotelle; A Tale of the Southern States . In the American edition, an anonymous senator, rather than Jefferson, portrays Clotelle's father. Clotelle; A Tale of the Southern States (Restricted) Clotel: An Electronic Scholarly Edition (Currently Restricted Access Only) Electronic Text Center
Browse Top Level Texts Project Gutenberg Authors B Brown text. Author Brown, William Wells, 18151884 Keywords Authors B Brown,William Wells, 1815-1884; Titles C ; Subject Gypsies. http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au
Browse Top Level Texts Project Gutenberg Authors B 17711810; Brown, William Wells, 1815-1884; Browne, Thomas, Sir, 1605-1682;Browning, Elizabeth Barrett, 1806-1861; Browning, Robert http://www.archive.org/texts/textslisting-browse.php?collection=gutenberg&cat=Au
Bookclub@ket: Clotel Card Catalog Entry Brown, William Wells, 18151884. Clotel. Children of presidentsFictionAfrican-American familiesFiction Racially mixed peopleFiction http://www.ket.org/bookclub/books/2002_feb/catalog.htm
Extractions: Genre/Form: Domestic fiction Series: Bedford cultural editions LC Control No.: LC Classification: Geog. Area Code: Author: Brown, William Wells, 1815-1884 Title: Published: New York: Modern Library, [2001] Edition Information: 2000 Modern Library pbk. ed. / introduction by Hilton Als; notes by Graham Hodges LC Control No.: Description: xx, 230 p.; 21 cm. NISBN: Notes:
William Wells Brown William Wells Brown, Documenting the American South (University of North Carolina at William Wells Brown (18151884), Houghton Mifflin This page, http://library.marist.edu/diglib/english/americanliterature/19thc-american-autho
Extractions: William Wells Brown (ca. 1814-1884) Chapter 3: Early Nineteenth Century - William Wells Brown (1814-1884) , PAL: Perspectives in American Literature - A Research and Reference Guide (California State University at Stanislaus): Another of Paul P. Reuben's pages. Includes a brief introduction, a list of primary works, two select bibliographies, and numerous study questions. Recommended.-MJM William Wells Brown , Online Books Page (University of Pennsylvania): Includes, among others, the following texts: Clotel, or The President's Daughter (1835 edition) (Gutenberg text), Clotelle, or The Colored Heroine (Gutenberg text), and The Negro in the American Rebellion: His Heroism and his Fidelity (page images at MOA).-MJM William Wells Brown , Spartacus Educational: Includes a short, illustrated biography followed by several excerpts from Brown's writings.-MJM William Wells Brown The American Fugitive in Europe Sketches of Places and People Abroad The Black Man, His Antecedents, His Genius, and His Achievements ... Narrative of William W. Brown, an American Slave (1849), and Three Years in Europe: Or, Places I Have Seen and People I Have Met
IMCPL Online Catalog Narrative of William W. Brown, a fugitive slave. Brown, William Wells, 18151884.My southern home, or, The South and its people. http://catalog.imcpl.org/ipac20/ipac.jsp?profile=web&index=BIB&term=934576
EBOOKS - ALPHABETICAL LIST ~ B Brown, Edna Adelaide, 18751944. Brown, John, MD. Brown, William Wells,1815-1884. Browne, Porter Emerson. Browne, Thomas, Sir, 1605-1682. http://www.globusz.com/authors_b1.html
Free EBooks - Alphabetical List - GLOBUSZ PUBLISHING Brown, John, 18101882. Rab And His Friends. Brown, William Wells, 1815-1884.Clotel; or, The President s Daughter; Clotelle A Tale of the Southern States http://www.globusz.com/authors_b.asp
Popular Graphic Arts: Subject Index Brown, John. Brown, John,18001859. Brown, William Wells,1815-1884. Browning,William S. Bruce, Blanche Kelso,1841-1898. Bruckner, Simon Bolivar. http://rs5.loc.gov/pp/pgahtml/pgaSubjects05.html
History 253: Slavery, A Selected Bibliography: Spring 2000 Brown, William Wells, 18151884. Narrative of William W. Brown, A Fugitive Slave.Boston The Anti?slavery office, 1847. Douglass, Frederick. http://www.hope.edu/academic/history/cohen/s00/253/slavebiblio.html
Extractions: This bibliography is designed mainly to help you find primary works that reflect the views of southern slaveholders. It also lists additional works that may provide you with context for understanding the primary source that you select. I. Primary Sources: Works that Focus Especially On Slavery or on the Slave Trade from the Perspective of the Masters or Traders Andrews, Charles Wesley. Memoir of Mrs. Ann R. Page 1807-1875 . New York: Garland Publishers, 1987.
Early 19th Cent.American William Wells Brown (18151884). Clotelle @ Carnegie-Mellon Narrative of WilliamW. Brown, an American Slave @ Documenting the American South http://www.colorado.edu/English/amlit/e19c.html
Extractions: American Literature This web page contains links to websites for the time period encompassing the early nineteenth century in American Literature. The page is divided into two sections: General Resources and Authors and their Works. Within the category of authors and their works, you will find an alphabetical listing by author; listed under the authors' names you will find web pages devoted to the individual authors (author pages), online texts, and criticism and reviews when available. If you are unable to find a particular author that you believe should be on this page, check either the Late Nineteenth Century or Colonial to 1800 pages. In addition, this website includes Modern American Literature and Contemporary American Literature , as well as, an overview of American Literary Resources available on the Internet. You can also return to the table of contents for The Archive General Resources American Authors A Celebration of Women Writers: 1801 - 1900 The Daguerreian Society - galleries of 19th century Daguerreotype photos. Documenting The American South Materials on Slavery From the UNC-CH Collections - an extensive collection of slave narratives.
AmSouth: View Record Subject(s) Brown, William Wells, 18151884.; Fugitive slaves United States Biography.; Plantation life Missouri History 19th century.; http://www.americansouth.org/viewrecord.php?id=27828
Search Over 1,000 Civil War Links Narrative of William W. Brown, an American Slave. William Wells Brown, 18151884.http//docsouth.unc.edu/Brownw/menu.html http://www.civil-war.net/searchlinks.asp?searchlinks=Abolition & Slavery
American Literary History, Volume 12 - Table Of Contents Brown, William Wells, 18151884. Clotel; or the president s daughter. Americanliterature Afro-American authors History and criticism. http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/american_literary_history/toc/alh12.3.html
Resources For American Literary Study, Volume 27 - Table Of Contents Brown, William Wells, 18151884. Clotel, or, The president s daughter a narrativeof slave life in the United States. Levine, Robert S. (Robert Steven), http://muse.jhu.edu/journals/resources_for_american_literary_study/toc/rals27.2.
Library System - Howard University Brown, William Wells, 18151884. Narrative of William W. Brown, a Fugitive SlaveWritten by Himself. Boston The Anti-Slavery Office, 1847. http://www.howard.edu/library/Reference/Guides/SlaveNarratives/default.htm
Extractions: http://memory. loc.gov/ammem/ndlpcoop/nhihtml/cwnyhshome.html Introduction "What does it mean to be another man's property?" How does it feel to work without wages. How does it feel to be physically brutalized and live on starvation diets. How does it feel to be forced into the role of less than human, inferior in all aspects of society? How does the victim voice his story to the society at large but through the slave narrative? The slave narrative genre began to appear in the eighteenth century with the publication of "John Saffin's Adam Negro's Tryall written in 1703 in answer to Samuel Sewall's well known antislavery tract, The Selling of Joseph." By 1831, the antislavery crusade had entered its major phase when thousands of biographies and autobiographies appeared in published form. Some appeared in abolition periodicals, separate printings, and some were questioned because they had been dictated by the ex-slave fearing the narrative had been tampered with by the ghost writer. Some narratives were questioned because the writer changed the names to protect against recapture.
Missouri Historical Society Here you can learn more about William Wells Brown (18151884) and Elizabeth HobbsKeckley (1818-1907), who both worked as slaves in St. Louis. http://www.mohistory.org/content/Exhibitions/AAHistoryPg1.aspx
Extractions: The Seeking St.Louis exhibition consists of two galleries. In Currents , 1764-1904 (Upper Level), you will encounter the stories of people who built St. Louis amid powerful currents of change. In Reflections , 1904-2000 (Upper Level), you will learn the stories of people who reshaped the city into a complex metropolitan region. In both of these galleries, you can explore St. Louisans' responses to three basic challenges - challenges we continue to face today: With this guide,you can explore the ways that African Americans in St. Louis have responded to these challenges. You'll also see how their history affects our lives today.
OpenCms - OPRF Brown, William Wells, 18151884. The narrative of William W. Brown, a fugitiveslave. New York Dover Publications, 2003. 305.897 GEN http://oprfhs.org/division/library/libacq/libacq0104.html
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