Sách nói: My Southern Home or, The South and Its People
- Download 01 - Preface/Chapter I audio
- Download 02 - Chapter II audio
- Download 03 - Chapter III audio
- Download 04 - Chapter IV audio
- Download 05 - Chapter V audio
- Download 06 - Chapter VI audio
- Download 07 - Chapter VII audio
- Download 08 - Chapter VIII audio
- Download 09 - Chapter IX audio
- Download 10 - Chapter X audio
- Download 11 - Chapter XI audio
- Download 12 - Chapter XII audio
- Download 13 - Chapter XIII audio
- Download 14 - Chapter XIV audio
- Download 15 - Chapter XV audio
- Download 16 - Chapter XVI audio
- Download 17 - Chapter XVII audio
- Download 18 - Chapter XVIII audio
- Download 19 - Chapter XIX audio
- Download 20 - Chapter XX audio
- Download 21 - Chapter XXI audio
- Download 22 - Chapter XXII audio
- Download 23 - Chapter XXIII audio
- Download 24 - Chapter XXIV audio
- Download 25 - Chapter XXV audio
- Download 26 - Chapter XXVI audio
- Download 27 - Chapter XXVII audio
- Download 28 - Chapter XXVIII audio
- Download 29 - Chapter XXIX audio
Thể loại sách nói
Tác giả
Giới thiệu
William Wells Brown was born a slave, near Lexington, Kentucky. His mother, Elizabeth, was a slave; his father was a white man who never acknowledged his paternity. Brown escaped slavery at about the age of 20. For many years he worked as a steam boatman and as a conductor for the Underground Railroad in Buffalo, New York. In 1843, he became a lecturer for the Western New York Anti-Slavery Society, and was a contemporary of Frederick Douglass.
Brown went to Europe in 1849 to encourage British support for the anti-slavery movement in the United States. He remained there until 1854 when British abolitionists purchased his freedom. Soon afterward, he returned to the United States to continue his work in the abolitionist movement.
Throughout his life he wrote several books, including his autobiography, Three Years In Europe; Or, Places I Have Seen And People I Have Met, Clotel, and The Rising Son; or, The Antecedents and Advancement of the Colored Race, among others. In My Southern Home: Or, The South And Its People, Brown’s final work, he reflects on his life and his experiences as a slave from a post-emancipation perspective. It is a review of his travels through several southern states during the time of slavery, including his observations and commentary on the social and political relationships between whites and African Americans of that period. (Introduction by James K. White)
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