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Radical Passion

Ottilie Assing's Reports from America and Letters to Frederick Douglass

by Christoph Lohmann (Author)
©1999 Textbook XXXVIII, 380 Pages

Summary

Radical Passion examines eighty essays and reports on the United States (1852-1865) by the German-American journalist Ottilie Assing (1819-1884) along with twenty-seven extant letters from Assing to Frederick Douglass during the years 1870-1879. A keen and critical observer of the American scene before and during the Civil War, Assing was passionately committed to her personal freedom and to political and social equality for African Americans. She believed in radical social movements, backed the German Revolution of 1848, and became an enthusiastic supporter of radical abolitionism, women's emancipation, and civil rights for black Americans. For almost three decades, she and Frederick Douglass were close intellectual collaborators and lovers. The reports and essays, originally written in German, are presented in their first English translation; an introduction provides biographical background and historical context.

Details

Pages
XXXVIII, 380
Year
1999
ISBN (Softcover)
9780820445267
Language
English
Keywords
American history Personal freedom Radical abolitionism Civil rights Social equality
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Wien, 1999. XXXVIII, 380 pp., ill.

Biographical notes

Christoph Lohmann (Author)

The Editor and Translator: Christoph Lohmann, Professor Emeritus of English and American Studies at Indiana University, holds academic degrees from Swarthmore College, Columbia University, and the University of Pennsylvania. Besides having published numerous articles in scholarly journals, he co-edited several volumes of W. D. Howells's letters and literary criticism. A native of Germany, he recently turned to German-English literary translations. He and his wife, Pamela Lohmann, are co-translators of Ruth Rehmann's The Man in the Pulpit, published in 1997.

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Title: Radical Passion