ACTS OF RESISTANCE TO NEW ENGLAND SLAVERY BY AFRICANS THEMSELVES IN NEW ENGLAND by Danielle Legros Georges
165 x 217mm, 40 pages, Black & white printing, Perfect bound, Softcover, 2025
Danielle Legros-Georges’ Acts of Resistance to New England Slavery by Africans Themselves in New England is a powerful and lyrical reckoning with the often-overlooked narratives of Black resistance in the North. Through a series of searing, evocative poems, Legros-Georges breathes life into historical figures like Elizabeth Freeman, Crispus Attucks, and Phillis Wheatley, illuminating their acts of defiance, self-making, and self-liberation. The collection reclaims the stories of those who resisted through legal battles, rebellion, survival, and sheer will, transforming archival records into haunting, and necessary verse. With a poet’s ear for rhythm and a historian’s eye for detail, Acts of Resistance is an essential meditation on the specter of enslavement, the unwashable stains of history, the fundamental poignancy of human agency, and the many forms of freedom-seeking that shaped early America. This chapbook is an archival “green field of imagining.”
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