GBH Openvault

American Experience; The Abolitionists; Interview with Manisha Sinha, part 3 of 4

Part of The Abolitionists Interviews.

2013

Manisha Sinha is Professor of Afro-American Studies at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst. She is the author of "The Counterrevolution of Slavery: Politics and Ideology in Antebellum South Carolina" (University of North Carolina Press, 2000) and "To Live and Die in the Holy Cause: Abolition and the Origins of America's Interracial Democracy."


License Clip
Series
American Experience
Program
The Abolitionists
Program Number

2501, 2502, 2503

Title

Interview with Manisha Sinha, part 3 of 4

Series Description

As television's longest-running, most-watched history series, American Experience brings to life the incredible characters and epic stories that helped form this nation. Now in its eighteenth season, the series has produced over 180 programs and garnered every major broadcast award.

Program Description

On January 1, 1863, when abolitionist leaders Frederick Douglass and William Lloyd Garrison received word that the Emancipation Proclamation had declared three million enslaved African Americans "forever free," it was the culminating moment of the most important civil rights crusade in American history, and the climax of a long and difficult friendship between two remarkable men. In this series, the 150th anniversary of the Proclamation, American Experience tells the story of how Douglass, Garrison and their abolitionist allies Harriet Beecher Stowe, John Brown and Angelina Grimke turned a despised fringe movement against chattel slavery into a force that literally changed the nation. The "holy warriors" of emancipation captured the private details of their tumultuous political and personal journeys toward freedom in letters, diaries, newspaper articles, and memoirs. They revealed themselves to be willful, arrogant, righteous, and unbending, yet empathic, faithful, loyal, candid, and just. They fought the slave-holding South with a moral passion and bickered among themselves with petty familiarity. Along the way, they fell in love, got married, had families, lost loved ones, formed cliques, quarreled and made up.

Duration

0:31:42

Asset Type

Raw video

Media Type

Video

Topics
History
Creators
Rapley, Rob (Producer)
Contributors
Sinha, Manisha (Interviewee)
Publication Information
WGBH Educational Foundation
Rights Summary

Rights Holder: WGBH Educational Foundation

Citation
Chicago: “American Experience; The Abolitionists; Interview with Manisha Sinha, part 3 of 4,” 2013, GBH Archives, accessed December 22, 2024, http://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_9974E9A7EEAB4A8EAF797048B20A29C7.
MLA: “American Experience; The Abolitionists; Interview with Manisha Sinha, part 3 of 4.” 2013. GBH Archives. Web. December 22, 2024. <http://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_9974E9A7EEAB4A8EAF797048B20A29C7>.
APA: American Experience; The Abolitionists; Interview with Manisha Sinha, part 3 of 4. Boston, MA: GBH Archives. Retrieved from http://openvault.wgbh.org/catalog/V_9974E9A7EEAB4A8EAF797048B20A29C7
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