
audiobook
by friherrinna Alexandra Gripenberg
The narrator sets the stage by tracing the birth of the United States, from the early Puritan settlements to the formation of a fledgling republic after the Revolutionary War. He contrasts the industrious, self‑governing North with the plantation‑based South, whose economy relied heavily on the labor of enslaved Africans. This geographic and cultural split provides the backdrop for a society wrestling with a stark moral contradiction.
Against this backdrop, a growing chorus of abolitionists—clergy, activists, and ordinary citizens—begins to organize, publish pamphlets, and stage public debates. Their arguments draw on religious conviction, Enlightenment ideals, and first‑hand testimonies from those who escaped bondage. Listeners are invited to glimpse the early stages of a fierce, often perilous campaign that would eventually reshape the nation's conscience.
Language
fi
Duration
~1 hours (97K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-08-29
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1857–1913
A bold Finnish writer and campaigner, she helped bring women’s rights into public life at a turning point in her country’s history. Her work joined books, journalism, and politics in one unusually active career.
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