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Book Cover
E-book
Author Seibert, Johanna, author.

Title Early African Caribbean newspapers as archipelagic media in the emancipation age / by Johanna Seibert
Published Leiden ; Boston : Brill, [2023]

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Description 1 online resource (xi, 318 pages) : color illustrations
Series Studies in periodical cultures ; volume 3
Studies in periodical cultures ; v.3.
Contents Intro -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Notes on the Text -- Illustrations -- Maps -- Figures -- Introduction: Mediating Emancipation: The Weekly Register and The Jamaica Watchman as Archipelagic Agents of Communication -- 1 Imaginations of Early Caribbean Newspapers -- 2 Periodical Studies and the Archipelago -- 3 Sites of Editorship and Periodical Materiality -- 1 The Business of Communication -- 1 Newspaper Markets under Archipelagic Conditions -- 2 Island Communities and the Local Ties of the Register -- 3 The Watchman and the Periodical Infrastructures of White Humanitarianism
2 Formats and Layouts in Motion -- 1 Materiality and the Insignificant Significance of the Register -- 2 The Transformative Designs of the Watchman -- 3 Newspaper Formats and Archive Building -- 3 Personhood and the Poetry Column -- 1 Poems and Periodical Cultures in the British Caribbean -- 2 Christmas Book Poems -- 3 Concubinage and Sentimental Verse -- 4 West Indian Worthies: Richard Hill and John Boyd -- 5 Satirical Interjections -- 4 Recording the Cycles of Black Rebellion -- 1 Miscellanies of Haiti: "Madame Christophe" and the Logic of the Final Page
2 Sketching Independent Haiti: Richard Hill's Multi-mode Auto-ethnography -- 3 Editorial Voices on the Turner Rebellion -- 4 Corresponding Samuel Sharpe's Confessions -- Conclusion: The Trajectories of African Caribbean Periodicals -- Works Cited -- Index of Names and Subjects -- Index of Sources
Summary "Early African Caribbean Newspapers as Archipelagic Media in the Emancipation Age shows how two African Caribbean newspapers in the early decades of the nineteenth century worked towards emancipation across both material and immaterial lines through medium-specific interventions. More concretely, this book proposes an archipelagic framework for understanding the emancipatory struggles of the Antiguan Weekly Register in St. John's and the Jamaica Watchman in Kingston. Complicating the prevalent narrative about the Register and the Watchman as organs of the free people of color, this book begins to explore the heterogeneity of Black newspaper print on the liberal spectrum. As such, Archipelagic Media and Early African Caribbean Newspapers makes the case that the Register and the Watchman participated in shaping the contemporary communication market in the Caribbean. To do so, this study engages deeply with the materiality of the newspaper and presents fresh visual material"-- Provided by publisher
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and indexes
Notes Description based on online resource; title from digital title page (viewed on December 09, 2022)
Subject Caribbean newspapers -- History -- 19th century
Black newspapers -- Antigua and Barbuda -- Saint John's -- History -- 19th century
Black newspapers -- Jamaica -- History -- 19th century
Enslaved persons -- Emancipation -- Antigua and Barbuda -- Saint John's -- History
Enslaved persons -- Emancipation -- Jamaica -- History
Free Black people -- Antigua and Barbuda -- Saint John's -- Social conditions -- 19th century
Free Black people -- Jamaica -- Social conditions -- 19th century
Black newspapers
Caribbean newspapers
Enslaved persons -- Emancipation
Social conditions
SUBJECT Saint John's (Antigua and Barbuda) -- Social conditions -- 19th century
Jamaica -- Social conditions -- 19th century
Subject Antigua and Barbuda -- Saint John's
Jamaica
Genre/Form History
Form Electronic book
LC no. 2022040956
ISBN 9004525289
9789004525283