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         Equiano Olaudah:     more books (30)
  1. Early Black British Writing (New Riverside Editions) by Olaudah Equiano, Mary Prince, et all 2003-09-05
  2. Le prince esclave by Olaudah Equiano, Ann Cameron, et all 2002-06-12

41. Academic Directories
Back to Educational Resources. equiano, olaudah,
http://www.allianceforlifelonglearning.org/er/tree.jsp?c=5655

42. Olaudah Equiano @ Catharton Authors
olaudah equiano. ? Bored? Meet people at Café Catharton Websites olaudah equianobritishlibrary.net. The equiano Foundation. olaudah equiano bbc.co.uk.
http://www.catharton.com/authors/3760.htm
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all of Catharton just Authors Catharton Authors E : Equiano, Olaudah Olaudah Equiano Bored? Meet people at Café Catharton Websites: Olaudah Equiano [britishlibrary.net] The Equiano Foundation Olaudah Equiano [bbc.co.uk] Message Boards: Suggest or Request a board Mailing Lists: Suggest or Request a list Chat Rooms: Suggest or Request a room Can't find what you want here? Try searching Google for Olaudah Equiano List of Works:
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43. BBC - History - Society And Culture - Protest And Reform -
olaudah equiano c.1745c.1797, olaudah equiano is famous for his autobiography,an account of his childhood in an area called 'Eboe
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/society_culture/protest_reform/equiano.shtml

44. James Cook And Olaudah Equiano
I was born in north England. My parents were poor farm workers. I decidedto run away to sea. I was lucky to get a job on the boats
http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/walk/timestrip/cook_equi.shtml

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History Schools ... Help Like this page? Send it to a friend! I was born in north England. My parents were poor farm workers. I decided to run away to sea. I was lucky to get a job on the boats carrying coal from Newcastle to London. I learned to be a very good sailor and taught myself to be a brilliant navigator. When I was 28, a war started and I joined the Royal Navy. I was quickly made the Captain of my own ship. After the war, the Government chose me to lead an expedition to the South Seas. I made three long voyages to Australia and New Zealand, the islands of the Pacific Ocean and the Antarctic and North America. I sailed further than any person before me and discovered many things. I was born in Essaka, a small village in West Africa. When I was about 11 years old, I was kidnapped and sold as a slave. I never saw my family again. I was put on a ship and taken to America. It was a horrible experience. I was sold to an English sailor who took me to London. For ten years I worked as a slave on ships that sailed around Europe. I taught myself to read and write. When I was 21, I paid my freedom. I carried on working. I visited many places and fought in wars. I saw how cruelly my fellow Africans were treated.

45. Heath Anthology Of American Literature 4/e Olaudah Equiano - Author Page
Editor. olaudah equiano (1745?1797) olaudah equiano and his sisterwere kidnapped in Africa, in what is present-day Nigeria. The
http://college.hmco.com/english/lauter/heath/4e/students/author_pages/eighteenth
Site Orientation Heath Orientation Timeline Access Author Profile Pages by: Table of Contents Authors by Name Authors by Year Internet Research Guide Textbook Site for: The Heath Anthology of American Literature , Fourth Edition
Paul Lauter, General Editor
Olaudah Equiano
Olaudah Equiano and his sister were kidnapped in Africa, in what is present-day Nigeria. The eleven-year-old Equiano was later separated from his sister and placed aboard a slave ship that sailed across the Atlantic on the Middle Passage, the deadly link on Great Britain’s lucrative commercial route in the eighteenth century. Trading vessels laden with weapons and cotton products sailed from British ports to purchase slaves in Africa. The human cargo was taken across the ocean and sold to estate owners in the Americas in exchange for rum and sugar. The ships then sailed back to England and repeated the three-part voyage.
As fiery debates raged in Parliament, Equiano composed his autobiography, which he published in March 1789. Many of the key men and women in the abolitionist crusade subscribed to the timely and well-written two-volume work, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano.

46. Africans In America/Part 1/Equiano's Autobiography
The Interesting Narrative of the Life of olaudah equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, TheAfrican Chapter 2 I hope the reader will not think I have trespassed on his
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part1/1h320t.html
Equiano's autobiography
The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, The African
Chapter 2
I hope the reader will not think I have trespassed on his patience in introducing myself to him with some account of the manners and customs of my country. They had been implanted in me with great care, and made an impression on my mind, which time could not erase, and which all the adversity and variety of furtune I have since experienced, served only to rivet and record: for, whether the love of one's country be real or imaginary, or a lesson of reason, or an instinct of nature, I still look back with pleasure on the first scenes of my life, though that pleasure has been for the most part mingled with sorrow.
I was there I suppose about a month, and they at last used to trust me some little distance from the house. This liberty I used in embracing every opportunity to inquire the way to my own home; and I also sometimes, for the same purpose, went with the maidens, in the cool of the evenings, to bring pitchers of water from the springs for the use of the house. I had also remarked where the sun rose in the morning, and set in the evening, as I had travelled along; and I had observed that my father's house was towards the rising of the sun. I therefore determined to seize the first opportunity of making my escape, and to shape my course for that quarter; for I was quite oppressed and weighed down by grief after my mother and friends; and my love of liberty, ever great, was strengthened by the mortifying circumstance of not daring to eat with the free-bom children, although I was mostly their companion.

47. A SON OF AFRICA: Facilitator's Guide
Madison University of Wisconsin Press 1967. equiano, olaudah; Vincent Carretta,ed., The Interesting Narrative and Other Writings, New York Penguin 1995.
http://www.newsreel.org/guides/equiano.htm
California Newsreel Printout Home Back To Film Page
Excerpts from "The Interesting Narrative of Olauda Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa the African" (London, 1789)
  • "THEY...CARRY OFF AS MANY AS THEY CAN SEIZE"
  • "A MULTITUDE OF BLACK PEOPLE...CHAINED TOGETHER"
  • "DREAD AND TREMBLING"
  • "THE STRONG ANALOGY...IN THE MANNERS...OF MY COUNTRYMEN, ...
    AND THOSE OF THE JEWS"
    Text and commentary prepared by Prof. Steven Mintz , University of Houston LINKS TO OTHER SLAVE NARRATIVES Selected Bibliography Bontemps, Arna, ed., Great Slave Narratives . Boston: Beacon Press 1969. Curtin, Philip D., ed. Africa Remembered: Narratives by West Africans from the Era of the Slave Trade . Madison: University of Wisconsin Press 1967. Equiano, Olaudah; Vincent Carretta, ed., The Interesting Narrative and Other Writings , New York: Penguin 1995. Feelings, Tom, The Middle Passage: White Ships/Black Cargo . New York: Dial Books 1995. Gates, Jr., Henry Louis, ed.
  • 48. Olaudah Equiano Conference
    olaudah equiano Representation and Reality. An International OneDay ConferenceSaturday 22 March 2003. Carretta, Vincent, 'olaudah equiano or Gustavus Vassa?
    http://humansciences.king.ac.uk/humanities/english/equiano.html
    English Quick Links English Home BA English MA English Research ... Log on to Blackboard
    Olaudah Equiano:
    Representation and Reality
    An International One-Day Conference
    Saturday 22 March 2003
    Late Registrations:
    Conference Description:
    Academic study of Olaudah Equiano has been energised in recent years by arguments asserting that some aspects of The Interesting Narrative (1789) may not represent Equiano's personal experience. In particular, the critics S.E. Ogude and Vincent Carretta have cast doubt over Equiano's account of his birth and upbringing in Africa, his kidnapping, and his experience of the Middle Passage. While Ogude's argument is based in textual analysis, Carretta's evidence emerges from archival work - yet both reach similar conclusions: that Equiano probably never visited Africa, and that the early parts of his Narrative are most likely rhetorical exercises, largely 'based on oral history and reading, rather than on personal experience'. As yet, Ogude and Carretta's findings have not been fully tested by the academy, nor have all the possible implications been explored. The many students and general readers of Equiano are invited to read the early

    49. Olaudah Equiano Conference
    olaudah equiano Representation and Reality. An International OneDay ConferenceSaturday 22 March 2003. Conference Speakers and Paper Titles
    http://humansciences.king.ac.uk/humanities/english/equiprog.html
    English Quick Links English Home BA English MA English Research ... Log on to Blackboard
    Olaudah Equiano:
    Representation and Reality
    An International One-Day Conference
    Saturday 22 March 2003
    Conference Speakers and Paper Titles:
    • John Bugg, Princeton University, New Jersey, USA: Until I should advertise myself": Olaudah Equiano and the Trope of the Talking Author.
    • Dr Brycchan Carey, Kingston University, UK: Opening Address.
    • Professor Vincent Carretta, University of Maryland, USA: Searching for Equiano.
    • Professor Tess Chakkalakal and Professor Stephen Meardon, Williams College, Massachusetts, USA: Equiano's Economics.
    • Professor Angelo Costanzo, Professor Emeritus of English at Shippensburg University of Pennsylvania, USA: 'Neither a Saint, a Hero, nor a Tyrant'.
    • Professor Kenneth R. Curtis, California State University Long Beach, USA: Equiano and World History: 'The Interesting Narrative' as a Key to Understanding the Eighteenth-Century Atlantic System.
    • Tara E. Czechowski, Fordham College, New York, USA: A Tableau of Pain: Undermining Pathologies of the African in Olaudah Equiano's 'Interesting Narrative'.
    • Professor Clenora Hudson-Weems, University of Missouri-Columbia, USA:

    50. . : History Section : History 1500 Onwards : Interesting Narrative Of The Life O
    Interesting Narrative of the Life of olaudah equiano. equiano, olaudah Carretta. InterestingNarrative of the Life of olaudah equiano equiano, olaudah Carretta.
    http://www.fasuuku.co.uk/p369.html
    Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano
    Equiano, Olaudah Carretta
    The Interesting Narrative (of the Life of Olaudah Equiano) and other Writings
    Olaudah Equiano
    Editor Vincent Carretta
    An account of the slave trade by a native African, former slave, and British subject, The Interesting Narrative is both an exciting, often terrifying, first hand account and an important precursor to such famous nineteenth-century slave narratives as Frederick Douglass's autobiography.
    Click here to read an excerpt

    Olaudah Equiano's Narrative recounts his kidnapping in Africa at the age of ten, his service as the slave of an officer in the British Navy, and his years of labour on slave ships until he was able to purchase his freedom in 1766.
    As a free man on a Central American plantation, he supervised slaves; increasingly disgusted by the effect of slavery on his co-workers, he returned to England in 1774. In England he worked for the resettlement of black people in Sierra Leone, married an Englishwoman, and became a leading and respected figure in the anti-slave movement.
    An inspirational autobiography, a tale of spiritual quest and fulfilment, a sophisticated treatise on religion, politics and economics, The Interesting Narrative is a work of enduring literary and historical value.

    51. The Life Of Olaudah Equiano, Or Gustavus Vassa, The African
    The Life of olaudah equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African.
    http://www.wmich.edu/dialogues/texts/equiano.html
    The Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African Dialogues Notes Links Teaching ... Citations In 1789, in England, freed slave and abolitionist, Olaudah Equiano published his autobiography, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, The African. This autobiography became the prototype for the genre of the slave narrative, and was the beginning of the canon of African literature in English. TIMELINE 1745 Equiano born in West Africa 1755 Captured and sold into slavery 1755 Arrived in West Indies 1756 Purchased by Lt. Pascal of the British Royal Navy as a gift for friends. Sees white people reading and becomes curious about books. 1757 Arived in Falmouth, England. Lived with a woman as her slave and was instructed in reading and writing. 1757-62 Was a slave onboard ships. 1763-67 Was a slave in the West Indies. 1766 Purchased freedom for 40 pounds at age 21. Stayed on as an employee of his master, but planned move to England. 1767 Purchased ticket to England. Worked as a hairdresser, but found his income lacking and returned to the shipping industry. Visited Turkey, Greece and Italy.

    52. Www.ipl.org/div/books/new-author.txt
    upenn.edu/webbin/gutbook/lookup?num=6057 Dewey Subjects 813.083 American and CanadianSociological, Psychological, Realistic Fiction equiano, olaudah, b. 1745
    http://www.ipl.org/div/books/new-author.txt

    53. Internet Public Library: Books
    The Interesting Narrative of the Life of olaudah equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, theAfrican, Written by Himself, Volume I, equiano, olaudah, b. 1745 full entry.
    http://www.ipl.org/div/books/recent.html
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    54. Equiano Main Page
    May the time come . . . when the sable people shall gratefully commemorate the auspiciousera of extensive freedom. . The Interesting Life of olaudah equiano. .
    http://www.princeton.edu/~howarth/304.Projects/Erera/Pages/Main.htm
    "May the time come . . . when the sable people shall gratefully commemorate the auspicious era of extensive freedom." The Interesting Life
    of Olaudah Equiano
    . . . African, slave, sailor, writer, Englishman, Christian, abolitionist
    Olaudah Equiano[o-lah- oo -day ek-wee- ah -no], called Gustavus Vassa by his white masters, became a legend through his words. In 1788 England published his autobiographical work, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustavus Vassa, the African , which set the precedent for anti-slavery literature written by former slaves themselves, which would have a profound impact on the abolition movements in the eighteenth century. Born in 1745 in a small village in modern-day Nigeria, Equiano would travel far before his death in 1797. African slave traders tore him from his family when he was eleven. Thus began a series of worldly experiences not matched by many of the most cosmopolitan people let alone of an oppressed young black man. Equiano offers unique perspective not found in the later works of African-American freedmen, like Frederick Douglass, for he remembers his native Arican community before enslavement. Equiano writes of his struggle to assimilate to the many cultures he became a part of, often by force: as Ibo, slave, sailor, Englishman, and Christian. His vivid descriptions and faithful telling of tales allow readers to relate closely to the troubled spirit of one man attempting to forge identity and gain self-empowerment in an adverse world.

    55. Equiano Timeline
    olaudah equiano Timeline. 1745 olaudah equiano born in Isseke, Nigeria. 1756Kidnapped by Aro peoples and is sold to various masters within Africa.
    http://www.princeton.edu/~howarth/304.Projects/Erera/Pages/Timeline.htm
    Olaudah Equiano Timeline
    • Olaudah Equiano born in Isseke, Nigeria.
    • Kidnapped by Aro peoples and is sold to various masters within Africa. Then endures the Middle Passage to Barbados and is sent to Virginia.
    • Bought by British Naval Officer Michael Henry Pascal and is named Gustavus Vassa. Takes first trip to England.
    • Serves the British navy during the Seven Years War (French and Indian War).
    • Baptized at St. Margarets Church, London.
    • In Savannah, hears famous evangelist George Whitefield.
    • Equiano sold to Robert King in Montserrat. Works on trading ships between the West Indies and the mainland American colonies.
    • Through practicing his own trade on the side, Equiano acquires enough money to buy his own freedom.
    • Completing one last mission for his old master, Equiano is shipwrecked in the Bahamas. Sails for London.
    • Sails to Italy and Turkey. Slave uprising on Montserrat.
    • Granville Sharp gets the Somerset decision, declaring that slavery cannot exist in England and slaves setting foot there are free.
    • Equiano on expedition to find an Arctic passage to India. Massachusetts slaves petition successfully for emancipation.

    56. The San Antonio College LitWeb Olaudah Equiano Page
    The olaudah equiano Page ( 17451797 ) Major Work olaudah's Interesting Narrative,( England, 1789 ; America , 1791 ). olaudah equiano from D. Campbell.
    http://www.accd.edu/sac/english/bailey/equiano.htm
    The Olaudah Equiano Page
    Major Work
    Olaudah's Interesting Narrative , ( England, 1789 ; America , 1791 ). Established the genre of the slave narrative. Edited and with an introduction by Robert J. Allison. Bedford of St. Martin's, 1995.
    About Equiano
    A Selected Bibliography.

    Olaudah Equiano
    from D. Campbell.
    Olaudah Equiano Page

    Back to Chronology
    Back to American Literature I

    57. Olaudah Equiano - Abolitionist
    Abolitionists olaudah equiano. olaudah equiano book!! The life of olaudahequiano, ed Paul Edwards, (EssexLongman GroupUK, 1989. Staying
    http://www.blackpresence.co.uk/html/equiano.htm
    Abolitionists
    O laudah Equiano
    O laudah Equiano, later to be known as (Gustavus Vassa) was born in what is Today Nigeria, kidnapped from his African village at the age of eleven, and sold to a Virginia planter. He was later bought by a British naval Officer, Captain Pascal, as a present for his cousins in London. Equiano bought his freedom after ten years of enslavement throughout the North American continent, where he assisted his merchant slave master and worked as a seaman. At the age of forty four he wrote and published his autobiography,
    The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, Or Gustavus Vassa, The African.

    58. Olaudah Equiano
    Cora Agatucci. 6 October 1998. olaudah equiano (17451797) Shorts Cutsthis webpage 1789 The Interesting Narrative of the Life . . .
    http://www.cocc.edu/cagatucci/classes/hum211/coursepack/Equiano.htm
    Humanities 211
    Prof. Cora Agatucci
    6 October 1998 Olaudah Equiano
    Shorts Cuts this webpage: The Interesting Narrative of the Life
    Summary of Equiano's Story
    1789 Review of Equiano's Narrative
    The Modern Importance More WWW Links
    The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano, or Gustava Vassa , is one of the first slave narratives published in English. Kidnapped as a child from the Benin region of Nigeria and shipped to the United States as a slave, Olaudah Equiano (ethnicity Igbo; AKA: Ibo) wrote his autobiography, as a free man in Great Britain under the pseudonym of Gustavus Vassa. Equiano offers a defense of Africa from an African perspective on cross-cultural relations with Europe, explaining how African systems of servitude differ from the chattel slavery of the Europeans. These and other slave narratives fueled the growing Abolitionist movement in Europe and the U.S. Portrait of Olaudah Equiano (British Library: African Collection):
    http://www.bl.uk/collections/africanprinted.html

    59. THE INTERESTING NARRATIVE OF OLAUDAH EQUIANO
    First Previous Next Last Index Text. Slide 3 of 9.
    http://www.fsu.edu/~CandI/ENGLISH/power/equiano/sld003.htm
    First Previous Next Last ... Text Slide 3 of 9

    60. African Writers Series - Writer Details - Olaudah Equiano (Nigeria)
    olaudah equiano (Nigeria), Writers Profile. AWS Books equiano's Travels.Additional information Register for updates about equiano. See also
    http://www.africanwriters.com/Writers/WriterTop.asp?cPK=EquianoOlaudah

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