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Editors' Note

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 May 2015

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Abstract

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press and British Association for American Studies 2015 

We are delighted in this issue to feature a special collection of essays edited by Fionnghuala Sweeney and Karen Salt on “Acts of Emancipation in the Art, Culture and Politics of the Black Diaspora.” Consisting of seven essays plus a feature-length introduction, the articles consider a number of different ways in which acts and arts of emancipation have been remembered and understood. Showcasing the exciting range of new scholarship that is emerging in the related fields of African American studies, African diasporic studies, slavery studies and American studies, among many more, this special issue adopts an interdisciplinary framework to excavate the stories of actors so often marginalized and underrepresented. As Sweeney writes toward the end of her introduction, the essays all “prompt consideration of the kinds of symbolic and political acts that capture what it meant to be involved in emancipation more broadly, of deeds of justice and humanity, great and small, that have deeper psychological, sociological and political meaning for our understanding of emancipation than is often thought,” and “emphasize that elaboration of the philosophical, political, existential and aesthetic questions around the nature of freedom and the nature of emancipation continues to be necessary.”

On the review side, we feature two review essays. In the first, “Recent Music History Scholarship: Pleasures and Drawbacks,” Harvey Cohen examines a range of recent works on American music as he investigates core debates related to race, jazz and American cultural history. He sheds powerful light on the extent to which “African American history, with its dramatic arcs of repression and redemption, has served as a particularly fruitful area for such scholarship”. In the second, “Disorder and Early Sorrow,” Peter Coclanis provides a detailed response to Joshua Rothman's groundbreaking book Flush Times and Fever Dreams: A History of Capitalism and Slavery in the Age of Jackson. In addition, we also feature an array of reviews that cover a range of topics from the course of American politics in the early republic, to representations of death in film, pop culture and American empire, to perceptions of communists in Cold War New York.