“Analyzing the impact of black abolitionist iconography on early black literature and the formation of black identity, Fugitive Vision examines the writings of Frederick Douglass, William Wells Brown, William and Ellen Craft, and Harriet Jacobs, and the slave potter David Drake.”
“[T]his startlingly original, meticulously researched study opens up new ways of considering the acts of self-representation in visual objects and literary texts by African Americans.”
— Susan Belasco, American Literature
“. . . the scholarship is excellent . . . Chaney’s readings are exhaustive, persuasive, and murkily brilliant.”
— Journal of American History
“. . . emphasizes the relationship between the literary character of slave narratives and the iconic images that often accompanied those narratives in the form of frontispieces, illustrations, or panoramas. [The author's] attention to both the visual and the verbal elements of African American culture challenges and complicates the now-classic studies of slave narrative that tend to highlight the mastery of literacy as the key to self-mastery and, thus, liberty.vol. 9 no. 4.5 Sept. 2009”
— Corey Capers, University of Illinois, Chicago
“Fugitive Vision [is] an important and well-researched study . . . Michael A. Chaney makes a distinct contribution to the literature about slave-born men and women who were dedicated to the permanent liberation of minds and bodies.”
— American Studies
“An eye-opening analysis of major sites, figures, and figurations of African American authorship.”
— Ezra Greenspan, Southern Methodist University
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