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Final ProjectMain MenuIntroductionExploring Integration and Free Black Perspectives in Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's CabinThe EndingThe Fate of Black Characters at the Close of Uncle Tom's CabinImagining AmericaWhite Characters' Viewpoints on Emancipation and IntegrationUncle Tom's Cabin and African ColonizationShould They Stay or Should They Go?The Missing Black PerspectiveAfrican-American Perspectives on Integration and ColonizationConclusionWorks CitedCaitlin Downey521f243cb92cfaab1942063a8e5df11231bf5acc
Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World
12016-12-14T13:24:01-08:00Caitlin Downey521f243cb92cfaab1942063a8e5df11231bf5acc141102plain2016-12-14T13:28:24-08:00Caitlin Downey521f243cb92cfaab1942063a8e5df11231bf5accDavid Walker's Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the World was highly controversial even after its first publication. Southern authorities tried to suppress its circulation and even many Northern abolitionists opposed it, calling it "incendiary". Some contemporary whites blamed the pamphlet for Nat Turner's 1831 insurrection in Southampton County, Virginia.
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12016-12-14T13:10:05-08:00Caitlin Downey521f243cb92cfaab1942063a8e5df11231bf5accAppeal Frontispiece1Frontispiece from the 1830 edition of David Walker's Appeal to the Colored Citizens of the Worldplain2016-12-14T13:10:05-08:00Caitlin Downey521f243cb92cfaab1942063a8e5df11231bf5acc