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  1. "Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question" is an essay by the Scottish essayist, historian and philosopher Thomas Carlyle. It was first published anonymously in Fraser's Magazine for Town and Country of London in December 1849, and was revised and reprinted in 1853 as a pamphlet entitled "Occasional Discourse on the Nigger Question".

  2. Here, sure enough, are peculiar views of the rights of negroes; involving, it is probable, peculiar ditto of innumerable other rights, duties, expectations, wrongs and disappointments, much argued of, by logic and by grape-shot, in these emancipated epochs of the human mind.

  3. Occasional discourse on the nigger question - Slavery, Abolition, Emancipation and Freedom - CURIOSity Digital Collections.

    • christine_jacobson@ harvard. edu
    • Houghton Library
  4. and again after the Civil War. In his Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question" in the December 1849 issue of Fraser's Magazine, Carlyle de nounced British Liberals and humanitarians who agonized over the suf fering of blacks in Africa and the Americas but neglected the suffering of British workers and Irish peasants at home.

  5. 7 de may. de 2019 · ON THE WRITING OF THE "OCCASIONAL DISCOURSE ON THE NEGRO QUESTION"1 by Aileen Christiansen Early in 1848 Carlyle began considering a new book. Against the background of revolution in France he decided that " 'organisation of labour' is precisely the question of questions for all governments whatso-

  6. On December 1849, Thomas Carlyle published “Occasional Discourse on the Negro Question” in Fraser’s Magazine; the article was later republished in his Critical and Miscellaneous Essays as “On the Nigger Question.” Image: Photograph of Thomas Carlyle, circa 1860s, by Eliott & Fry.

  7. John Stuart Mill escribió así su The Negro Question (1850) como respuesta un discurso que percibía como retrógrado, intentado socavar sus fundamentos mediante la fórmula hedonista y el método propios de la escuela de su padre, James Mill, y de su mentor Jeremy Bentham.