TY - JOUR
T1 - “There is no place like a happy home”: Information Wanted notices, the Christian Recorder, and the search for missing family members in post-emancipation America
AU - Fraser, Rebecca J.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - This article considers the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) newspaper, the Christian Recorder's publication of the formerly enslaved “Information Wanted” advertisements through the mid-1860s to turn of the century as a means through which the AME promoted the ideal of the “family” as positive models for Blacks themselves, also challenging white prejudices concerning family life of the formerly enslaved. Conversely, the formerly enslaved used them as a public forum to narrate, and perhaps begin to make sense of, their own stories of loss and longing and articulating white southern responsibility for the heartache and traumas of slavery that they had caused.
AB - This article considers the African Methodist Episcopal (AME) newspaper, the Christian Recorder's publication of the formerly enslaved “Information Wanted” advertisements through the mid-1860s to turn of the century as a means through which the AME promoted the ideal of the “family” as positive models for Blacks themselves, also challenging white prejudices concerning family life of the formerly enslaved. Conversely, the formerly enslaved used them as a public forum to narrate, and perhaps begin to make sense of, their own stories of loss and longing and articulating white southern responsibility for the heartache and traumas of slavery that they had caused.
KW - African Methodist Episcopal Church
KW - American slavery
KW - Black print culture
KW - Frances E. W. Harper
KW - Julia C. Collins
KW - The Christian Recorder
KW - domestic slave trade
KW - sources of enslaved experience
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85201394596&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1177/03631990241273174
DO - 10.1177/03631990241273174
M3 - Article
JO - Journal of Family History
JF - Journal of Family History
SN - 0363-1990
ER -