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Emancipation

2020
Amid Confederate defeat in the Mississippi River Valley, Confederate Christians, freedpeople, and northern missionaries all claimed that Christian behavior should govern their work for opposite goals. White southern Christians believed that slavery’s biblical paternalistic order justified their opposition to emancipation and black freedom, and they ...
Sonja Gallhofer, Jim Haslam
  +6 more sources

Emancipation

2010
The process of emancipation in the Atlantic world spanned most of the 19th century and took a variety of forms. Some, such as Haiti’s 1804 declaration of immediate emancipation and the United States’ Emancipation Proclamation and Thirteenth Amendment, followed long, violent conflicts.
Roderick McDonald   +1 more
  +4 more sources

Framing emancipations

Journal of Classical Sociology, 2014
This article deals with the topic of emancipation in the social sciences and its transformation in recent decades. Despite its centrality for sociological analysis, emancipation is a topic characterized by ambivalent meanings – autonomy and authenticity, contingency and normativity, free will and negative freedom – and by ‘Eurocentric’ and ...
openaire   +1 more source

Emancipation

2016
Since the early nineteenth century, “emancipation” has been the catch phrase used to designate the release of Jews from an inferior political status through the acquisition of equal rights. The term is inherently ambiguous: “Emancipation” conflates the status and its attainment, and it assumes a single goal and process of achievement.
openaire   +1 more source

EMANCIPATORS.

The Lancet, 1927
openaire   +1 more source

Emancipation

2006
Toni Ahrens, Paul Finkelman
openaire   +1 more source

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