Professor Zoe Trodd
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Who’s the most photographed American of the 19th century? Abraham Lincoln? Mark Twain? In fact, it was Frederick Douglass, the former slave turned abolitionist, orator, and seminal thinker. With 160 photographs, many never before seen, this book provides a strong visual history of Douglass and his era. But it does more. Douglass believed that photography had extraordinary social power and, with the inclusion here of previously unpublished writings and speeches on visual aesthetics, he emerges as an important theorist of the new art form. Looking to be the sleeper on Liveright’s fall list, with big response expected
--Library Journal

Picturing Frederick Douglass marries all of my present interests: legacies of slavery; beautiful images of a beautiful man; and the first theory of photography as a democratic medium capable of social change. Stunningly original and elegantly written and designed, it will inspire anyone interested in the links between the visual and the verbal
--Sally Mann

Douglass emerges here out of photographic technology's earliest years, with majestic beauty, and through the power of his own self-creations. The book is the result of intrepid research and brilliant analysis; it charts Douglass's life visually, allowing him to look back at us wryly, wistfully, wrathfully
--David Blight

Picturing Frederick Douglass marks a significant turn in the long history of Douglass’s reception. Both as a subject for photography and as a critical theorist who reflected on the democratic, humane, and truth-telling powers of the medium, Douglass emerges in this beautiful volume in a completely new light
--W.J.T. Mitchell

Nothing less than a masterpiece in the fields of biography, African-American history, and not least of all the neglected area of iconography… A riveting instant classic and a pure pleasure to behold
--Harold Holzer

Picturing Frederick Douglass is to be shared, studied, read and repeated every six months, not only in the classroom but in our living rooms… Beautifully researched and storied… A true treasure!--Deborah Willis

Stauffer, Trodd, and Bernier offer exhilarating scholarship and our idea of Douglass and our sense of photography in nineteenth-century America are deepened. This is brilliant and very moving work
--Darryl Pinckney
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