chartsdaa.blogg.se

Books by david blight
Books by david blight








books by david blight

He didn’t bear that awful burden alone, though. Huntington Library, San Marino, California Douglass, Blight says, was a “man of words,” making this book “the biography of a voice.”ĭavid W. On the stuff that’s known, Blight is an attentive if sometimes fastidious guide, poring over speeches and texts with the critical equivalent of a magnifying glass. The result is comprehensive, scholarly, sober Blight is careful to tell us what cannot be known, including the persistent mystery of Douglass’s father (who was most likely white, and may have been Frederick’s mother’s owner).

books by david blight

Evans to illuminate Douglass’s later years, after the Civil War.īlight, who has edited and annotated volumes of Douglass’s autobiographies, undertakes this project with the requisite authority and gravity. In tracing an arc from bondage to freedom, Douglass cast himself as a “self-made hero,” Blight writes, while leaving “a great deal unsaid.” A number of other books have filled in the gaps - exploring Douglass’s relationships with the women in his life, for instance, as well as his fraught and transformative friendship with Abraham Lincoln - but Blight’s is the first major biography of Douglass in nearly three decades, making ample use of materials in the private collection of a retired doctor named Walter O. Plenty has been written about Douglass in the 200 years since he was born, not least by Douglass himself, who recounted his life story in three autobiographies - a paper trail of memoirs that Blight deems “both a pleasure and peril” for the biographer. Now that Douglass is enshrined on his pedestal, shorn of what made him “thoroughly and beautifully human,” Blight notes how the “old fugitive slave” has been “adopted by all elements in the political spectrum,” eager to claim him as their own.

books by david blight

Blight wants to enrich our understanding of an American in full who, for more than half his life, wasn’t even legally recognized as such. With “Frederick Douglass: Prophet of Freedom,” the historian David W. Time has a way of sanding off the rough edges of historical memory, turning even the most convulsive, contentious lives into opportunities for national triumphalism and self-congratulation.










Books by david blight