The Emancipation Circuit

Black Activism Forging a Culture of Freedom

Book Pages: 464 Illustrations: 36 maps, including 34 in color Published: June 2022

Author: Thulani Davis

Subjects
History > U.S. History, American Studies, African American Studies and Black Diaspora

In The Emancipation Circuit Thulani Davis provides a sweeping rethinking of Reconstruction by tracing how the four million people newly freed from bondage created political organizations and connections that mobilized communities across the South. Drawing on the practices of community they developed while enslaved, freedpeople built new settlements and created a network of circuits through which they imagined, enacted, and defended freedom. This interdisciplinary history shows that these circuits linked rural and urban organizations, labor struggles, and political culture with news, strategies, education, and mutual aid. Mapping the emancipation circuits, Davis shows the geography of ideas of freedom---circulating on shipping routes, via army maneuvers, and with itinerant activists---that became the basis for the first mass Black political movement for equal citizenship in the United States. In this work, she reconfigures understandings of the evolution of southern Black political agendas while outlining the origins of the enduring Black freedom struggle from the Jim Crow era to the present.

Praise

“In this spectacular book Thulani Davis presents a framework for not only rewriting the Civil War and Reconstruction, but for understanding the entire history of the Black freedom movement extending into the twentieth century. As groundbreaking as W. E. B. Du Bois’s Black Reconstruction, The Emancipation Circuit is a masterpiece.” — Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Hammer and Hoe: Alabama Communists during the Great Depression

"The Emancipation Circuit offers a powerful reimagining of the networks that helped to secure Black freedom during the Civil War and Reconstruction: It is a history about enslaved people’s efforts to free themselves and about their local struggles to give substance to their legal emancipation, as well as a mapping of the geography that enabled their achievements and the circuits that spread their political goals like pollen in the wind. . . . The Emancipation Circuit reminds today’s activists that any organizing for Black freedom must be multifaceted and must pursue local aims while traveling along preexisting networks to become a broader collective effort." — Elias Rodriques, The Nation

"Thulani Davis’s The Emancipation Circuit is an important contribution to Black social and political thought that helps center Black women and Black resistance of United States history and social movements." — Krystal Batelaan, Ethnic and Racial Studies

"The Emancipation Circuit provides a convincing analysis of the spatial history of emancipation ... a valuable reference for future research." — Keith D. McCall, Journal of Southern History

"By documenting the emergence of Black political, religious, and labor organizations, the development of channels for transmission of ideas and news, and conflicts and tensions, The Emancipation Circuit adds nuance to our understanding of the development of Black political thought and shows how its unique attributes continue to influence Black politics today." — Kevin R. Johnson, Journal of American History

"The Emancipation Circuit is an exciting and important book. Demonstrating an adroit dexterity with the secondary literature, Davis has provided future historians with a roadmap that for far too long has hid in plain sight. Bringing a poet’s eye to the quotidian details of the Civil War–era Black world, Thulani Davis provides an innovative reinterpretation of the world freedpeople and Black northerners made together." — Robert D. Bland, Journal of African American History

“In this extraordinary work of scholarship, Thulani Davis gives us something we have not had before—a new and beautifully written deeply researched, account of grassroots organizing by formerly enslaved people in the postbellum South and their ‘capacious sense of the political.’ Filled with brilliant insights, this compelling account of the activist networks and political formations through which black people built the ‘first mass black movement in the U.S.’ deserves a prominent place in every class and every discussion of the work black people did to become free and to claim the rights of citizenship.” — Thavolia Glymph, author of The Women’s Fight: The Civil War’s Battles for Home, Freedom, and Nation

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Author/Editor Bios Back to Top

Thulani Davis is a professor and a Nellie Y. McKay Fellow in the Afro-American Studies Department at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and author of My Confederate Kinfolk: A Twenty-first Century Freedwoman Discovers Her Roots. A poet and longtime writer for theater, film, and journalism, Davis has been a recipient of a Lila Wallace-Readers Digest Writers Award, a PEW Foundation National Theatre Artist Residency, and a Charles H. Revson Fellowship on the Future of New York City.

Table of Contents Back to Top
List of Maps  xi
List of Tables  xiii
Acknowledgments  xv
Introduction: Black Political Thought as Shaped in the South  1
1. Flight: Movement Matters  19
2. The Emancipation Circuit: A Road Map  44
3. Virginia: Assembly  80
4. North Carolina: Custody  109
5. South Carolina: Majority  133
6. Georgia: Mobilization  165
7. Florida: Faction  196
8. Alabama: Redemption  217
9. Louisiana: Societies  243
10. Mississippi: Bulldoze  269
11. Arkansas: Minority  294
Conclusion: What Lives On Is Black Political Thought  321
Notes  345
Table Source Notes  393
Bibliography  397
Index  427
Sales/Territorial Rights: World

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Finalist, 2023 Association for the Study of African American Life and History (ASALH) Book Prize


Winner of the 2023 MAAH Stone Book Award, presented by the Museum of African American History Boston | Nantucket


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