More Information About Sewally and the Man-Monster Print

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Revision as of 10:49, 11 July 2011 by Jnk (talk | contribs) (Bibliography and Sources for Visualizing the Man-Monster.)
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Continued from: Visualizing the Man-Monster: Peter Sewally/Mary Jones, New York City, 1836


For Jonathan Ned Katz's detailed history of Peter Sewally's story see: Peter Sewally - Mary Jones, June 11, 1836

For Tavia Nyong'o's detailed analyses of the Man-Monster print see: Tavia Nyong’o: "The Man-Monster: A Sapphic Tale of 1830s New York", April 8, 2011


See also:

Addams, Charles. Dear Dead Days: A Family Album. New York: G.P. Putnam & Sons, 1959. ASIN: B000G2O7DS

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Clay, E.W. Life in Philadelphia," 1829. E. W. Clay began drawing a very popular series of cartoons in 1828, after he had seen George and Robert Cruikshank's Life in London drawings while on a trip to England. Their work featured the adventures of three uninhibited young men on the town; Clay's focused on social pretensions. Between 1828 and 1830 he produced 14 aquatint engravings for the series: 4 depicted whites; 10 were caricatures of Philadelphia's free black population. The drawings were extremely popular; they were reproduced in a number of media, in more and less expensive forms, and were widely imitated by cartoonists in other cities, including New York and London. The comic image of the hyper-elegant urban black would soon become one of the two essential stereotypes of the minstrel stage. E.W. Clay, "Life in Philadelphia" Series. Philadelphia: published variously by Wm. Simpson and S. Hart, 1828-1830. Information accessed July 1, 2011 from University of Virginia website at: http://utc.iath.virginia.edu/abolitn/gallclayf.html


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Clay, E.W. Clay, "Life in Philadelphia, No. 11," 1828. Aquatint cartoon, drawn and etched by E. W. Clay. Philadelphia: Published by Wm. Simpson, 1828. Caption: "Have you any flesh coloured silk stockings, young man? Oui Madame! here is von pair of de first qualite!" Courtesy of the Library Company of Philadelphia.






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Clay, E.W. "Life in Philadelphia," No. 12, 1829. Aquatint cartoon, drawn and etched by E. W. Clay. Philadelphia: Published by S. Hart & Son, 1829. Caption: "Take away, take away dose rosy lips,/ Rich, rich in balmy treasure!—/ Turn away, turn away dose eyes ob lub,/ Less I die wid pleasure!!! Dat is bery fine, Mr. Mortimer, you sing quite con a moor, as de Italians say!!" Courtesy of the Library Company of Philadelphia.







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Clay, E. W. "Life in Philadelphia" [unnumbered], 1828. Aquatint cartoon, drawn and etched by E. W. Clay. Philadelphia: Published by Wm. Simpson, 1828. Caption: "How do you like de new fashion shirt, Miss Florinda? I think dey mighty elegam—I see you on New Year day when you carry de colour for de Abolition 'siety—you look just like Pluto de God of War!" Courtesy of the Library Company of Philadelphia.








Cohen, Patricia Cline. The Murder of Helen Jewett: The Life and Death of a Prostitute in Nineteenth-Century New York. New YorK: Knopf, August 11, 1998.

Gilfoyle, Timothy J. City of Eros: New York City, Prostitution, and the Commercialization of Sex, 1790-1920. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 1992. ISBN-10: 0393028003 ISBN-13: 978-0393028003

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Howard, Rollin, and George Griffin. Minstrel show performers Rollin Howard (in wench costume) and George Griffin, c. 1855. Scan from: William J. Mahar. Behind the Burnt Cork Mask: Early Blackface Minstrelsy and Antebellum American Popular Culture. University of Illinois Press December 1, 1998. ISBN-10: 9780252066962. ISBN-13: 978-0252066962. ASIN: 0252066960.






Katz, Jonathan Ned. Love Stories: Sex Between Men Before Homosexuality. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, December 2001. Hardcover: ISBN: 9780226426150, Paper ISBN: 9780226426167.


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Robinson, Henry R. depicted in a cartoon, late 1838 or early 1839. Print titled: "LOCO FOCO PERSECUTION, OR CUSTOM HOUSE, VERSUS CARICATURES. Accessed July 6, 2011, Library of Congress: http://www.loc.gov/pictures/item/2008661320/