Reviews
"Liberating Sojourn is a collection of essays that primarily deal with Douglass's eighteen-month sojourn in the United Kingdom during 1845 and 1846, where he lectured and collected the money required to purchase his freedom and set up his own newspaper. Anyone interested in abolitionism or Frederick Douglass will find Liberating Sojourn revealing and thought-provoking."
—Paul A. Cimbala, author of Under the Guardianship of the Nation
Description
Still in his twenties but already famous for his fiery orations and controversial autobiography, black abolitionist Frederick Douglass traveled to Great Britain in 1845 on an eighteen-month lecture and fund-raising tour. This book examines how that visit affected transatlantic reform movements and Douglass’s own thinking. The first book dedicated specifically to the trip, it features the work of scholars from both sides of the Atlantic—including Douglass biographer William McFeely and abolitionist scholar R. J. M. Blackett—who use Douglass’s visit to reexamine aspects of his life and times. The contributors reveal the visit’s significance to an understanding of transatlantic gender relations, religion, radicalism, and popular views of African Americans in Britain and also examine such topics as Douglass’s attitudes toward the Irish and his campaign against the Free Church of Scotland for accepting southern money. Together, these essays show that Douglass’s journey was a personal and political triumph and a key event in his development, leaving him better prepared to set the strategies and ideologies of the abolitionist movement.