Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. "Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question" is an essay by the Scottish essayist, historian and philosopher Thomas Carlyle. It was first published anonymously in Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country of London in December 1849, and was revised and reprinted in 1853 as a pamphlet entitled "Occasional Discourse on the Nigger Question".

  2. Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question THE following occasional discourse, delivered by we know not whom, and of date seemingly above a year back, may, perhaps, be welcome to here and there a speculative reader.

  3. What are the true relations between negro and white, their mutual duties under the sight of the Maker of them both; what human laws will assist both to comply more and more with these?

  4. Thomas Carlyle's infamous essay, "Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question", was published in 1849 in Fraser's Magazine of London. Carlyle revamped this essay and reprinted it in 1853 as a pamphlet entitled Occasional Discourse on the Nigger Question.

  5. most overtly racist essays, "Occasional Discourse on the Negro Ques-tion" (1849), published just months after he toured Ireland with Duffy. Examining Young Ireland's involvement with Carlyle makes it clear that the movement, despite its emphasis on neutralized national identity, shared Carlyle's skepticism about theories of progress that

  6. 8 de may. de 2008 · ‘Ireland, and black!’, the title for this essay, comes from the Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question’, published anonymously in 1849, and attributed to Thomas Carlyle, in which Carlyle forew...

  7. Resumen. La abolición de la esclavitud en las colonias españolas del Caribe fue un largo y tortuoso proceso que no se completó plenamente hasta 1886. En el debate abolicionista español se dieron cita argumentos de muy diversa índole: morales, religiosos, jurídicos, humanitarios, políticos y económicos.