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Clotel
Clotel












clotel

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clotel

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    clotel

    This authentication occurs automatically, and it is not possible to sign out of an IP authenticated account.Ĭhoose this option to get remote access when outside your institution. Typically, access is provided across an institutional network to a range of IP addresses. If you are a member of an institution with an active account, you may be able to access content in one of the following ways: The Clotel/Miralda/Clotelle, so revealed, evolving as history evolved, shows itself to be a masterpiece of the nineteenth-century American novel.Get help with access Institutional accessĪccess to content on Oxford Academic is often provided through institutional subscriptions and purchases. An electronic scholarly edition created in 2006 unites the four versions in a hypertext that embeds each version in its original epitext. Reception was hampered by the fact that many critics believed the version they were reading was the only version, and the different versions were regularly treated as separate novels. Slave women heroines, white in appearance, led Black militant critics in the 1970s to find the novel insufficiently Black. The story evolves from an abolitionist novel to a post-abolitionist romance, radically changing each time. Brown published three further versions of Clotel: as Miralda in 1860, as Clotelle in 1864 and as Clotelle again in 1867. William Wells Brown’s Clotel or the President’s Daughter (London, 1853) gives a fictive account of the slave daughters and granddaughters of Thomas Jefferson.














    Clotel