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Frank J Webb (1828-1894)

Page history last edited by dolmii remeliik 2 yrs ago

 

Frank J. Webb is one of the influential African-American, who contributed  a novel title the The Garies and Their Friends to the literary movement during the Romantic period. The page is a biographical account on Webb. Although, this account is solely based on Webb's "works, contemporary accounts, and government statistical records", historians have been able to compose a record of Webb's life and works. Webb is said to have been born in Philadelphia in 1828. He is known for his first novel, "The Garies and Their Friends," a novel about African slaves who worked their way up the social standing through hardwork and hope. Although Webb wrote during a time of slavery, his novel is deemed part of the literary movement of the Romantic period. Romanticism is an inner and philosophical focus of redefining the individual and the world surrounding.  Webb sees a world of hope and peace within "The Garies and Their Friends" between two cultures. Webb exposes what some would understand as the first account of slavery in the North and the White community's different attitudes toward slavery.

The page is open to the public and claims to offer the "best-researched and most complete collection of literature content." The information provided about Frank J. Webb informs us about the author as well as gives insight on his novel.

 

"Webb, Frank J. INTRODUCTION." Nineteenth-Century Literary Criticism. Ed. Russel Whitaker. Vol. 143. Thomson Gale, 2005. eNotes.com. 2006. 9 Jun, 2007

< http://www.enotes.com/nineteenth-century-criticism/frank-j-webb >.

 

 

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"The Garies and Their Friends" by Frank J Webb

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