Freedom’s Journal and the Intermedial Power of Periodicals
Freedom’s Journal and the Intermedial Power of Periodicals
Disciplines
Other Humanities (20%); Linguistics and Literature (80%)
Keywords
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Periodical Studies,
Nineteenth-Century Print Culture,
African American Literature,
American Literature,
Intermediality,
Black print culture
This project studies the first Black-owned and Black-published US-American newspaper, Freedoms Journal (182729), exploring how the newspaper offered a unique tool of communication and intellectual stimulation that produced radical cultural meaningsespecially for early Black Americans whose opportunities for widespread intellectual cultivation, community growth, and cultural expression were limited. The research focuses particularly on the relationship between Freedoms Journals physical and technological characteristics like its page layout, masthead, and printed visuals, on the one hand, and the newspapers textual content on the other hand. This relationship is called the content-medium relationship, and to better understand how it may have intentionally or unintentionally created for readers different important meanings and effectsfrom new understandings of Black peoples role in science, the arts, and history to considerations of different political routes toward racial equality and justicethe project is broken into sections that investigate different but related aspects of the content-medium relationship in Freedoms Journal. Some of the key questions that the project addresses include: What methods did this Black-owned and Black-operated newspaper in the 1820s United States use to produce substantial challenges to the status quo without jeopardizing the safety of its editors, printers, contributors, and readers? What made the newspaper an especially effective tool for Black cultures in the United States (and abroad)? What made it different than other forms of printed media like the book? To answer these questions, the project examines a wide variety of underappreciated textual genres published Freedoms Journal, including advertisements, short stories, poems, letters, news reports, travel accounts, articles, opinions, extracts, and reviews of literature and theater. The project is the first of its kind to bring the mostly European field of Intermediality Studies together with investigations into nineteenth-century Black US-American newspapers and culture. The research will take place at the Department of American Studies at the University of Graz, which is also home to the Centre for Intermediality Studies in Graz.
- Universität Graz - 100%
- Oliver Scheiding, Johannes Gutenberg Universität Mainz - Germany
- Irina Rajewsky, Johannes Gutenberg-Universität Mainz - Germany
- Benjamin Fagan, Auburn University - USA
- Derrick R. Spires, Cornell University - USA
- Rudin Max, Library of America - USA
- Elizabeth Mchenry, New York University - USA
- Ivy Wilson, Northwestern University - USA
- Liza Kirwin, Smithsonian Institution - USA
- Joycelyn K. Moody, The University of Texas at San Antonio - USA
- Carla Peterson, University of Maryland - USA