Radical passion : Ottilie Assing's reports from America and letters to Frederick Douglass
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Radical passion : Ottilie Assing's reports from America and letters to Frederick Douglass
(New directions in German-American studies, v. 1)
P. Lang, c1999
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
German-American journalist Ottilie Assing was a supporter of radical abolitionism, women's emancipation, and other radical social movements of the 19th century. She and Frederick Douglass were close intellectual collaborators and lovers, and this book provides a first-hand look into her life, love, and politics, through a collection of 80 reports and essays she wrote about life in the United States between 1852 and 1865, as well as 27 of her letters to Douglass from 1870-1879. Lohmann (English and American studies, Indiana U.) supplies an introduction to Assing and her work, as well as notes to each of her essays.
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