Chapter 1
White Houses and Black Print
Part I:
"Our Church Organ": Toward a Cultural and Material History of the
Early Recorder
Chapter 2
"Dense Darkness": Recovering the Recorder's History
Chapter 3
From Pine Street to the Nation (and Back Again): The Business of
the Recorder
Chapter 4
"Their Friends at Home with Papers": Recorder Subscription and
Subscribers
Part II:
"Would not such a narration be worth reading?": The Christian
Recorder and African American Literary History
Chapter 5
"We are in the world": Reading the Recorder in the Civil War
Era
Chapter 6
"So Let Us Hear from All the Brethren": The Christian Recorder and
Correspondence
Chapter 7
"That Wished Home of Peace": The Personal and the Political in
Christian Recorder Elegies
Chapter 8
Black (Women's) Fortunes and The Curse of Caste
Works Cited
Index
Eric Gardner is Professor of English at Saginaw Valley State University. He is the author of Unexpected Places: Relocating Nineteenth-Century African American Literature.
"With Black Print Unbound, Eric Gardner has significantly advanced
the study of African American culture and history while at the same
time giving a master class in working across the various methods of
inquiry and styles of research gathered under the big tent of print
culture studies. ... Black Print Unbound uses bibliography,
biography, history, and literary criticism to deliver a field
defining and field expanding work." --Jonathan
Senchyne, SHARP News
"magisterial vision and imaginative force that will set new
standards for periodical scholarship." --Prize Committee, The
Research Society for American Periodicals
"Black Print Unbound is an exemplary work of recovery; it not only
draws attention to the neglected archive of the Recorder, but it
highlights the ways in which its editors, contributors and readers,
against the odds, formed extensive textual communities." --The
Times Literary Supplement
"This in-depth case study thus makes a significant contribution to
ongoing debates surrounding print cultures and their publics in the
United States during the nineteenth century. ... Black Print
Unbound is a testament to Gardner's commitment to the ongoing
project of recovering nineteenth-century black lives and texts. ...
This book represents an important contribution to these efforts and
provides a model of literary and print culture studies
'unbound' from canonical authors and texts." --MELUS: Multi-Ethnic
Literature of the United States
"...a valuable resource for those interested in race, media
studies, and American history in general. Highly recommended."
--CHOICE
"The Christian Recorder was the most important and influential
forum for African American writing in the nineteenth century, and
Eric Gardner is the best scholar on the subject. A comprehensive
study, deeply grounded in archival research, that considers the
Christian Recorder as both institution and fluid text, this will be
one of those rare books about which one can honestly say, 'This
changes everything.'" --John Ernest, author of
Chaotic Justice: Rethinking African American Literary History
"Black Print Unbound far exceeds the pages of the printed word.
Gardner has meticulously reconstituted a textured history of the
Christian Recorder that provides deep insight into
nineteenth-century African American literary culture-writers and
readers, authorship, literary form and genre-yet also opens a wide
window onto black society and activism nationwide. His scholarship
is impeccable, the book richly rewarding." --Carla L. Peterson,
author of Black Gotham: A Family History of African Americans in
Nineteenth-Century New York City
"Eric Gardner's detailed analysis of the Christian Recorder during
the Civil War era demonstrates that scholars must reexamine their
assumptions about 19th century African American print culture. This
carefully researched volume provides an essential resource for both
historians and literary scholars examining print culture or the AME
Church in the Civil War era."-Mitch Kachun, author of Festivals of
Freedom: Memory and Meaning in African American
Emancipation Celebrations, 1808-1915
"Not only constitutes a significant contribution to the study of
African American print but will also likely prove foundational to
future research. Gardner has written one of those generous works of
scholarship that seeks not to utter the last word on a subject but
to open up an archive to new avenues of scholarly activity..."
--American Periodicals
"A significant contribution to the study of African American print
but will also likely prove foundational to future research. Gardner
has written one of those generous works of scholarship that seeks
not to utter the last word on a subject but to open up an archive
to new avenues of scholarly activity." ---American Periodicals
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