

Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Loading... Last Seen: The Enduring Search by Formerly Enslaved People to Find Their Lost Familiesby Judith Giesberg
No tags None No current Talk conversations about this book. no reviews | add a review
"Drawing from an archive of nearly five thousand letters and advertisements, the riveting, dramatic story of formerly enslaved people who spent years searching for family members stolen away during slavery"-- No library descriptions found. |
LibraryThing Early Reviewers AlumJudith Giesberg's book Last Seen: The Enduring Search by Formerly Enslaved People to Find Their Lost Families was available from LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Current DiscussionsNone
![]() GenresNo genres Melvil Decimal System (DDC)973.0000History & geography History of North America United States United States United States United States United StatesRatingAverage:![]()
Is this you?Become a LibraryThing Author. |
In the antebellum American south, whites casually cast aside black pain by surmising that blacks did not develop deep familial bonds. Indeed, even today, one can hear similar sentiments casually made about the “weak†nature of black families. Judith Giesberg seeks to correct this mistaken sentiment by providing enthralling historical examples of how many blacks sought husbands, wives, parents, and children through newspaper ads for up to 50 years after emancipation.
The ads that Giesberg bases this book on are relatively short – a few sentences each. This book displays them at the start of each chapter, and readers can be excused if they find them unimpressive. Yet Giesberg plumbs them to an extraordinarily deep level. She finds other mentions of the seekers in the historical record; she empathetically explores the social bonds that drove people towards freedom decades after emancipation; and she provides historical context on both local and national levels to instruct. She weaves these approaches into a tapestry that realistically portrays the hardships of new freedom among a vindictive class of former white “masters.†She shows the deeply human longing and resiliency that undergird these queries.
Although Giesberg seems to extract all that exists about each of these brief narratives, high levels of detail often trump moving the plot along. That is, it reads like an academic history more than a gripping tale. This book could have benefitted from more of a central storyline. As it stands, it’s more of an anthology around a common theme and structure. The historical analyses are excellent, and she certainly enlivened my imagination about how enslavement oppressed many lives – and oppresses us still today. The stories of how much this “Freedom Generation†overcame will inspire readers for decades to come. (