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Empowering Words Outsiders And Authorship In Early America Karen Ann Weyler

  • SKU: BELL-47238036
Empowering Words Outsiders And Authorship In Early America Karen Ann Weyler
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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Empowering Words Outsiders And Authorship In Early America Karen Ann Weyler instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of Georgia Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 2.73 MB
Pages: 328
Author: Karen Ann Weyler
ISBN: 9780820343259, 0820343250
Language: English
Year: 2013

Product desciption

Empowering Words Outsiders And Authorship In Early America Karen Ann Weyler by Karen Ann Weyler 9780820343259, 0820343250 instant download after payment.

Standing outside elite or even middling circles, outsiders who were marginalized by limitations on their freedom and their need to labor for a living had a unique grasp on the profoundly social nature of print and its power to influence public opinion. In Empowering Words, Karen A. Weyler explores how outsiders used ephemeral formats such as broadsides, pamphlets, and newspapers to publish poetry, captivity narratives, formal addresses, and other genres with wide appeal in early America.


To gain access to print, outsiders collaborated with amanuenses and editors, inserted their stories into popular genres and cheap media, tapped into existing social and religious networks, and sought sponsors and patrons. They wrote individually, collaboratively, and even corporately, but writing for them was almost always an act of connection. Disparate levels of literacy did not necessarily entail subordination on the part of the lessliterate collaborator. Even the minimally literate and the illiterate understood the potential for print to be life changing, and outsiders shrewdly employed strategies to assert themselves within collaborative dynamics.

Empowering Words covers an array of outsiders including artisans; the minimally literate; the poor, indentured, or enslaved; and racial minorities. By focusing not only on New England, the traditional stronghold of early American literacy, but also on southern towns such as Williamsburg and Charleston, Weyler limns a more expansive map of early American authorship.

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