Jesse Olsavsky

Assistant Professor of History, Duke Kunshan University

He is a historian who focuses largely on the history of slavery, abolitionism, and their legacies. He teaches courses on American history, American political institutions and Pan-African thought. He was co-director of the Freedom Lab, an interdisciplinary faculty-student research center devoted to the study of un-freedom and liberation in the modern world. He is also co-director of the Gender Studies Initiative, which organizes academic lectures, conferences, discussions, as well as student research on the topics of Gender, Feminism, and Sexuality.

His First book is titled The Most Absolute Abolition': Runaways, Vigilance Committees, and the Rise of Revolutionary Abolitionism, 1835-1861 (LSU Press 2022), which was a finalist for the Harriet Tubman Book Prize.

He is currently working on my second book, tentatively titled "The Tradition of Frederick Douglass: Pan-Africanism and Self-Determination, 1817-1945." The book is both a reinterpretation of Douglass' relationships to Africa and the Caribbean, as well as a study of the ways numerous African and Caribbean writers, newspaper editors, political leaders, and ordinary people interpreted Douglass' thought, making him an icon of early Pan-Africanism.

His current and past research has been funded by such institutions as the ACLS, the Schomburg Center for Research in Black Culture, the National Endowment for the Humanities, Yale University, and the University of Connecticut Humanities Institute.

He has published essays on the contributions of enslaved and free women activists to abolitionism and feminism, on underground activism in the life of Frederick Douglass, on runaway slaves, on the antislavery roots of prison/police abolition, and on the influence of abolitionist political theory in the Pan-African, anti-colonial thought of W.E.B. Dubois.

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Contact

0512- 36657593
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