Todd Vogel
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The Black Press
New Literary and Historical Essays
Edited by Todd Vogel
Rutgers University Press
The Black Press progresses chronologically from slavery to the impact and implications of the Internet to reveal how the press’s content and its very form changed with evolving historical and cultural conditions in America. The first papers fought for rights for free blacks in the North. The early twentieth-century black press sought to define itself and its community amidst American modernism. Writers in the 1960s took on the task of defining revolution in that decade’s ferment. It was not been until the mid-twentieth century that African American cultural study began to achieve intellectual respectability.
- Copyright year: 2001
Rewriting White
Race, Class, and Cultural Capital in Nineteenth-Century America
By Todd Vogel
Rutgers University Press
What did it mean for people of color in nineteenth-century America to speak or write "white"? More specifically, how many and what kinds of meaning could such "white" writing carry? In ReWriting White, Todd Vogel looks at how America has racialized language and aesthetic achievement.
- Copyright year: 2004
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