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POPULAR MEDIA E-mail
Written by AAI Staff   
Wednesday, 30 May 2007

Popular Media

 

The Amistad story was not only a legal case and a political issue: it was also a media sensation. The Africans touched raw nerves in Antebellum America. They became the stuff of high culture and popular culture # of poetry and penny papers.

For context, consult the Amistad Story: Africans in America page.

 

Some examples of popular and miscellaneous media materials in the library include:

 

a pamphlet published by John Barber in 1840 compiling newspaper accounts, engravings, interviews and court records (crime and trial pamphlets being a common form of lowbrow reading in this period) ...

 

a poem celebrating Cinque as a symbol of freedom, written by James Monroe Whitfield, an African-American poet ...

 

the playbill for a minstrel show melodrama showing in the Bowery Theater in New York City ...

 

a journal article undertaking a phrenological analysis of Cinque's skull # purporting to discover his character by tracing the contours of his skull (phrenology was a psuedoscience then in vogue) ... 
Last Updated ( Wednesday, 27 June 2007 )
 
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