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Machine generated contents note: Introduction: Rethinking Outside and Inside through the Early Black Prison Intellectual
Gallows Death and Political Critique : Abraham Johnstone's Address, Dying Confession, and Letter to His Wife (1797)
Lunacy and Liberation, Black Crime and Disability : Antislavery Argument in the Dying Confession of Pomp (1795)
Nineteenth-Century Counter/Terrorism : Black Prison Intellectual Nathaniel Turner's Confessions and the Southampton Revolt (1831)
Nearly Six Months Imprisoned : Celia's Textual and Embodied Intellectualism in Missouri's Callaway County Jail (1855)
Interlude : Postemancipation Criminality and Enmity in the Christian Recorder (1861-1901)
Dear Governor : Parole Requests as Literary Genre in James Foster's Letters (1901)
Conclusion: Early Black Prison Intellectual Legacies.

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