We Are American Citizens

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19th century Black politics
A01=Claire Bourhis-Mariotti
Africa
African American history
Antebellum national colored conventions
Author_Claire Bourhis-Mariotti
Black activism
Black agency
Black citizenship
Black colonization and emigration
Black community building
Black diaspora
Black diasporic thought
Black empowerment
Black political identity
Black resistance
Black transnationalism
Canada
Caribbean
Category=NHTS
Civil Rights history
Colored Conventions movement
diasporic consciousness
early Black nationalism
early Black organizing
emigrationism
eq_bestseller
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
forthcoming
free people of color
Haiti
long Civil Rights movement
pre-Civil War activism
Racial discrimination
Racial justice
social and political movements
United States

Product details

  • ISBN 9780820376974
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: University of Georgia Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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We Are American Citizens offers a groundbreaking reexamination of the antebellum national Colored Conventions, demonstrating that these gatherings constituted the first structured civil rights movement in the United States, and examines the emergence of Black transnationalism within this context. Drawing from an extensive archive of convention minutes, press coverage, and writings by Black activists, Bourhis-Mariotti shows how free people of color used these conventions not only to protest racial injustice but to build a collective political identity and formulate strategies to claim their rightful place as American citizens. Indeed, the conventions functioned as collaborative spaces where diverse voices debated, strategized, and forged solidarity across regional and (trans)national boundaries. These animated discussions gave rise to a diasporic political and social consciousness, shaping the Black community as both a social and political group in the decades leading up to the Civil War. The study reveals how strategies—from respectability to emigrationism—evolved in response to shifting local and federal contexts and how Black activists engaged with American and foreign people of color. Importantly, it challenges the view that Black emigrationism undermined civil rights efforts, positioning it instead as a foundational expression of Black transnationalism. Ultimately, the book restores the conventions to their rightful place at the heart of early Black activism and political thought.

CLAIRE BOURHIS-MARIOTTI is a professor of African American history and the codirector of the research unit TransCrit at the University of Paris 8-Paris Lumières. In addition to Wanted! A Nation! (Georgia), she is the author of Isaac Mason: Une vie d’esclave and coeditor of Writing History from the Margins: African Americans and the Quest for Freedom. She lives and writes in France.

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