YOU WERE LOOKING FOR :African American Imagery in the Nineteenth Century
Essays 61 - 90
This paper explores the words of key nineteenth century Americans like William Graham Sumner, Chief Joseph, and Frederick Douglass...
This paper compares and contrasts the positives and negatives of nineteenth century boarding schools for Native Americans. There a...
a progression of Indian emigration into the central plains and western regions of the country, based not only the movement of whit...
In seven pages this paper examines the American economy and increasing industrialization from the mid-nineteenth century until the...
In five pages this paper examines narratives by Harriet Jacobs and Frederick Douglass in a consideration of nineteenth century sla...
the revolutionary era helped shape a new consciousness of women s political worth and capacities; this made their official exclusi...
In five pages the seventeenth through nineteenth century history of the state of New Jersey is discussed with the Lenni Lenape tri...
of those character traits became a part of what most Americans like to think of as an uniquely American point of view, as well as ...
In eight pages this paper discusses how the U.S. military defeated the Native Americans during the nineteenth century within the c...
be seen as a bundle of rights which may be separable, for example the sub soil rights may be the property of the state, but others...
Her life journey coupled her with a man who became her husband and took her with him on his expedition to Chihuahua, Mexico. What...
more democratic, liberal and capitalistic visions of the 19th century (Wood 95). With republicanism we see that such things as ine...
and insights as previous nature poets and against the threat of a materialism that seems to be viewed as a destructive force capab...
were able, through circumstances, to identify themselves with the people. This isnt too far from the campaign run by Bill Clinton ...
the battle between the North and the South done, the future held some promise. But, that future could not exist if the Natives sti...
(through industrialization), rather than a place to keep pristine or clear. The problem was, in his treatise, Turner ignor...
well as the rising tension of the competitive race between the teams from the East and the West" (Rochman, 1998, p. 908). By the ...
In ten pages this paper discusses American racial oppression and the black response to it during the nineteenth and twentieth cent...
In five pages this report discusses the importance of struggle in these nineteenth century American literary masterworks that feat...
In five pages a letter written from a mid nineteenth century perspective of an adult answers questions regarding American life whe...
society as a whole had become better educated by the mid-19th century, a new market presented itself for stories, regional sketche...
North. The business this family chose to engage in, at least eventually, was education. They started a school. The school would be...
an invasion. This was not an unclaimed and unused continent. Indeed, indigenous peoples not only lived here but rightfully claim...
early 19th centuries, Spain was perhaps the most powerful nation on earth. It has established colonies in the New World, and treas...
contended to be even more misleading. The infatuation with Native Americans is, however, particularly obvious when one considers ...
always rationalized based on diplomatic or human rights objectives. For example, when American politicians wanted trade access th...
until the outbreak of the War Between the States during the middle of the century), the country almost seemed to be two polar oppo...
rejection highly influenced Lazaruss "Spagnoletto," which provided Lazarus with the "literary props" to effectively represent the ...
developed, even barbaric (Ferro, 1997). This was true within the then US, there had been the perception of the Native Americans as...
in American culture, despite her pro-immigration sentiments, which were directly opposed to the anti-immigration public feeling of...