You are here

Digital Exhibit: The Freedom Activist Archive

Top Stories

Library Open 24 Hours for Finals

The library will be OPEN 24 HOURS starting at 7 a.m. Monday, April 22 until 4:30 p.m.

Read More ➝

Puppies & Popcorn

Join us for Puppies & Popcorn on May 1st at 1pm.

Read More ➝

Nuke Nook

The Nuke Nook has arrived!

Read More ➝

Special Collections has posted a digital exhibit on The Freedom Activist Archive.

The archive, created by Dr. Delicia Daniels through research in the Louisiana Room, establishes a key aspect of African American Culture currently underdeveloped in government archives by extending and altering the way we engage the narratives of “runaway slaves.”

This archive begins with the transformation of an 1831 New Orleans antebellum newspaper titled The Bee. Twenty-Seven “runaways slave ads” were collected to complete this assessment. The men and women in these advertisements are according to Marisa Fuentes, “spectacularly violated, objectified, disposable, hypersexualized, and silenced.” To counter this cruelty, The Freedom Activist Archive, presented through Scalar, a digital platform, conceals this cruel vilification with a visual method of erasure and highlights appropriate categories such as Political Clothing and Escape Measures based on unobserved language in the original ad.

This exhibit and others created by Special Collections can be viewed under Digital Exhibits.

SHARE THIS |