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Frederick Douglass in Chinese

Running man image from workshop poster

African American literature of slavery has a translation history dating from at least the 1840s.  One of the Project's collections addresses this history, with special attention to translations of Frederick Douglass published from the 19th-century to the present day.  The collection includes podcast readings of selected chapters from Douglass' 1845 narrative in French, Hebrew, Spanish, and most recently a Chinese reading by Prof. John Zou.  Read more...
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Helia's Narrative

by Antislavery Webmaster last modified 2007-12-07 10:43 2007 by Kevin Bales and ZoeTrodd

Helia LaJeunesse was enslaved as a “restavec”—child domestic—in Haiti. She told her story to Peggy Callahan, for Free the Slaves, on June 15, 2007, in Haiti.