Search Results: Returned 11 Results, Displaying Titles 1 - 11
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-- mains noires :2010., Groupe intervention video Call No: BLK DVD 971.428 A582c Availability:1 of 1 At Your Library Summary Note: This film investigates slavery in Canada through the story of Marie-Josephe Angelique, a Black slave accused of burning Montreal in 1734. After an epic trial, she was tortured and sentenced to death. But was she really guilty of this crime or was she the victim of a bigger conspiracy? Mixes interviews with historians and theatrical re-enactments to explore a little-known piece of Canadian history.
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c2004., McGill-Queen's University Press Call No: QWF BLK 971.428 M157b c.2 Availability:1 of 1 At Your Library
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c2010., McGill-Queen's University Press Call No: QWF BLK 971.428 M157d c.2 Availability:1 of 1 At Your Library Series Title: Studies on the history of Quebec Volume: 21.
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-- Black nation :2013., Adult, Between the Lines Edition: eBook ed. Summary Note: "In the 1960s, for at least a brief moment, Montreal became what seemed an unlikely center of Black Power and the Caribbean left. In October 1968 the Congress of Black Writers at McGill University brought together well-known Black thinkers and activists from Canada, the United States, Africa, and the Caribbean -- people like C.L.R. James, Stokely Carmichael, Miriam Makeba, Rocky Jones, and Walter Rodney. Within months of the Congress, a Black-led protest at Sir George Williams University (now Concordia) exploded on the front pages of newspapers across the country -- raising state security fears about Montreal as the new hotbed of international Black radical politics"--Provided by publisher.
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By Cooper, Afuac2006., HarperCollins Call No: BLK 971.428 A582c Availability:1 of 1 At Your Library
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c1997., Véhicule Press Call No: QWF BLK 971.428 W722r Availability:1 of 1 At Your Library Series Title: Dossier Québec series.
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1998., Harvard University Press Call No: BLK Bio M663c Availability:1 of 1 At Your Library Summary Note: On February 15, 1851, Shadrach Minkins was serving breakfast at a coffeehouse in Boston when history caught up with him. The first runaway to be arrested in New England under the 1850 Fugitive Slave Law, this illiterate black man from Virginia found himself the catalyst of one of the most dramatic episodes of rebellion and legal wrangling before the Civil War. In a remarkable effort of historical sleuthing, Gary Collison has recovered the true story of Shadrach Minkins' life and times and perilous flight. His book restores an extraordinary chapter to our collective history and at the same time offers a rare and engrossing picture of the life of an ordinary black man in nineteenth-century North America. As Minkins' journey from slavery to freedom unfolds, we see what day-to-day life was like for a slave in Norfolk, Virginia, for a fugitive in Boston, and for a free black man in Montreal. Collison recreates the drama of Minkins' arrest and his subsequent rescue by a band of black Bostonians, who spirited the fugitive to freedom in Canada. He shows us Boston's black community, moved to panic and action by the Fugitive Slave Law, and the previously unknown community established in Montreal by Minkins and other refugee blacks from the United States. And behind the scenes, orchestrating events from the disastrous Compromise of 1850 through the arrest of Minkins and the trial of his rescuers, is Daniel Webster, who, through the exigencies of his dimming political career, took the role of villain.
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c1988., Véhicule Press Call No: BLK 785.42 G4882s Availability:1 of 1 At Your Library Series Title: Dossier Québec series