Research Catalog
The Massachusetts quarterly review
- Title
- The Massachusetts quarterly review [electronic resource].
- Publication
- Boston : [s.n.], 1885.
Available Online
Details
- Additional Authors
- Description
- 1 online resource (v.).
- Series Statement
- Slavery and anti-slavery: a transnational archive. Part 3: The institution of slavery
- Uniform Title
- Slavery and anti-slavery: a transnational archive. Part 3: The institution of slavery.
- Subject
- Note
- Reproduction of the original from the Yale University Libraries.
- The Massachusetts quarterly review was a publication with essays ranging from history and literature to current events and politics. Edited by Ralph Waldo Emerson, Theodore Parker, and James Elliott Cabot, The Massachusetts quarterly review was published in Boston from 1848 until 1850 and included contributions from Julia Ward Howe, the elder Henry James, and James Russell Lowell. While most essays centered on philosophy and history, slavery was an important topic in the periodical. An anti-slavery periodical, The Massachusetts quarterly review offered many topics for reading and conversation.
- OCLC
- 823042042
- galsas3000867
- Title
- The Massachusetts quarterly review [electronic resource].
- Imprint
- Boston : [s.n.], 1885.
- Current Frequency
- Quarterly
- Series
- Slavery and anti-slavery: a transnational archive. Part 3: The institution of slaverySlavery and anti-slavery: a transnational archive. Part 3: The institution of slavery.
- Local Note
- Reproduced from the source library are: Mar. 1, 1885-July 1, 1885 (2 issues available).Images from the source libraries are selected or scattered issues as well as various editions of the cataloged title and related titles (where indicated in the MARC record) as representative of the general publishing history of the title during the nineteenth century.
- Connect to:
- Added Author
- Emerson, Ralph Waldo, 1803-1882.Parker, Theodore, 1810-1860.Cabot, James Elliot, 1821-1903.Howe, Julia Ward, 1819-1910.James, Henry, 1811-1882.Lowell, James Russell, 1819-1891.