Contraband Guides

PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESSISBN: 9780271083858

Race, Transatlantic Culture, and the Arts in the Civil War Era

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By Paul H. D. Kaplan
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PENN STATE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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HARDBACK
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Pages:
312

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Description

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgments

Introduction

1. Representations of People of Color in Nineteenth-Century American Accounts of Italian Travel

2. “A Mulatto Sculptor from New Orleans”: Eugène Warburg in Europe, 1853–1859

3. “The Black Man To-day Means Liberty”: African American Figures in the Work of Emanuel Leutze

4. “Something American”: Art and Slavery in the Correspondence of John Ruskin and Charles Eliot Norton

5. Old Masters: The Western Tradition of the Visual Arts in African American Culture in the Civil War Era

6. Contraband Guide: Mark Twain on Race and the Renaissance 207

Notes 225

Bibliography 257

Index



“Both a creative and fastidious scholar, Paul Kaplan aims to shed fresh light on the dialogue concerning race, nationalism, and representation. In this well-argued volume, he deftly weaves together travel writing by Americans abroad becoming aware of Africans in Europe; racial representations by the talented mixed-race Louisiana sculptor Eugene Warburg, and the German American painter Emanuel Leutze; a dialogue on racial matters between two major intellectuals, Charles Norton and John Ruskin; and the relevance of the Old European Masters whose racial representations made an impact on African Americans.”

—Patricia Hills, author of Painting Harlem Modern: The Art of Jacob Lawrence

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