Towards a New Grammar of Justice: John Swanson Jacob’s Autobiography as a Spectacular Performance of Freedom

20oct2:00 pm3:30 pmTowards a New Grammar of Justice: John Swanson Jacob’s Autobiography as a Spectacular Performance of Freedom

Event Details

John Swanson Jacobs’s remarkable 1855 autobiographical slave narrative, The United States Governed by Six Hundred Thousand Despots, was lost until it  was found in 2016 in an Australian archive.  Writing from the other side of the world, beyond the reach of American law and humanitarian authority, John Jacobs—brother of Harriet Jacobs and friend of Frederick Douglass—demonstrates the potential of unfiltered, unapologetic Black writing to speak truth to power.  Literary Historian Jonathan Schroeder, who found and has now brought to life this remarkable manuscript, describes how John S. Jacobs’s world-altering words compel us to reckon with America as a nation that, in 1776, commenced two experiments at once:  one in democracy, the other in tyranny.

Because this Presentation will be a Zoom Webinar, pre-registration is required.  You may register HERE.

A Zoom invitation will be sent to all registrants by email three or four days before the Presentation.  If you have registered but do not receive the Zoom invitation, we ask that you check your spam filter.

For more information about John Swanson Jacobs’s rediscovered autobiography, The United States Governed by Six Hundred Thousand Despots, you can look HERE.

Time

October 20, 2024 2:00 pm - 3:30 pm(GMT-04:00)