1st Edition

Black Editorship in the Early Atlantic World

Edited By Nele Sawallisch, Johanna Seibert Copyright 2026
150 Pages
by Routledge

150 Pages
by Routledge

This book pays respect to different embodiments of Black editors in the Atlantic world, highlighting that from North to South America to Great Britain they occupied and promoted multifaceted roles, agendas, and poieses during a transformative period in the Atlantic world, the long nineteenth century. Black people's contributions to print ventures have been constant and manifold across the... Read more

Introduction: Atlantic interventions of Black editorship in the long nineteenth century

Nele Sawallisch and Johanna Seibert

 

1. “After you, my dear Alphonse;” Or, when politeness and good intentions are not enough

Frances Smith Foster

 

2. How to become an antiracist newspaper in the 1890s Black Atlantic: The ethical imperative of recirculation in Celestine Edwards’s Fraternity

Marina Bilbija

 

3. “Leave that slavery-cursed republic”: Mary Ann Shadd Cary and Black feminist nationalism, 1852–1874

Nneka D. Dennie

 

4. Haiti and the United States: In Black print

Ronald Angelo Johnson

 

5. “It is to a great extent, a new book”: Josiah Henson, John Lobb, and the challenges of white editorship of Black texts

Hannah-Rose Murray

 

6. Frederico Baptista de Souza: the formation of a Black editor in the South Atlantic

Lívia Maria Tiede

 

7. Subversive editing: Rebellious reprints in Freedom’s Journal

Scott T. Zukowski

 

8. Trajectories in Black Atlantic print culture studies: A virtual roundtable

Nele Sawallisch and Johanna Seibert

 

Biography

Nele Sawallisch is Assistant Professor for American Literature at Trier University, Germany. Her first book, Fugitive Borders: Black Canadian Cross-Border Literature at Mid-Nineteenth Century was published with transcript in 2018. She has published on Canadian and US-American Literatures, Black literary history, the slave narrative, gendered borders, and print cultures.

Johanna Seibert earned her PhD in American Studies at the Obama Institute at the University of Mainz, Germany. In 2022, she published her book Early African Caribbean Newspapers as Archipelagic Media in the Emancipation Age with Brill. She now works as a strategist with a focus on science diplomacy at the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation.