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"emancipated" Definitions
  1. no longer limited or controlled, especially by legal, political or social considerations

244 Sentences With "emancipated"

How to use emancipated in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "emancipated" and check conjugation/comparative form for "emancipated". Mastering all the usages of "emancipated" from sentence examples published by news publications.

Emancipated from Lee's home by a black woman as she emancipated herself, the priceless artifact is now in the hands of a storefront preacher in Queens.
Roc Marciano, Quelle Chris & Danny Brown Dabrye - "Emancipated" feat.
The next year, Wheatley was emancipated when John Wheatley died.
The bill passed with only one exception: legally emancipated minors.
Obviously, it's important to talk about the emancipated literary variety.
I offer my poetics to this tribe of emancipated spectators.
"When it was safe, he emancipated his slaves," she said.
The growth of AI potentially offers a more leisurely, emancipated future.
The woman who emancipated her husband's manhood from its torso shackles?
Few of the slaves were emancipated until the law required it.
Do we really want to be emancipated from all of it?
I emancipated myself from that very rigid, controlled attitude toward sex.
Because a woman is emancipated, does that mean she's on the hunt?
But Mimi is emancipated, so her life is a little more glorious.
"Their goal was to be emancipated," Mr. Bayar, the campaign strategist, said.
People with this mind-set value the emancipated individual above the cohesive community.
The emancipated, educated, fully literary black bourgeoisie would undeniably be a full citizen.
Americans looked at Kurdish female fighters, and saw them as brave emancipated women.
Exceptions are made for younger students who are veterans, married or legally emancipated.
She became emancipated at age 22018, and around that time, started auditioning for movies.
He and his stepfather battled, and at 15, Mr. Thomas became an emancipated minor.
She's going to Virginia to treat the newly emancipated through this new medical program.
Velázquez emancipated Pareja in 1654, and he went onto to become a portraitist himself.
She is thought to have been the last slave emancipated in Greenwich, in 1825.
This week, Jada explained why she allowed Jaden Smith to be emancipated at age 15.
But this is 1923, and to be that kind of emancipated woman was almost impossible.
Antoinette is raised to fear the emancipated black slaves who resent the crumbling white aristocracy.
His speech at the Academy was better, conceding that French had "emancipated itself from France".
Under the guidance of a caring woman named Sunny, Josie emancipated herself as a teenager.
And when the newly emancipated turned to those facilities for help, they were turned away.
After a year, Weinraub returned to L.A., legally emancipated herself, and looked for a job.
It commemorates this group of slaves who learned that they had been emancipated months earlier.
The league's demands reflected anxieties about the modern, emancipated woman that emerged in the interwar period.
As a consequence of that, scientists thought that human females had been "emancipated" from hormonal control.
In a more emancipated era, they might have found outlets for their talents in orthodox careers.
Here's what we know for sure: Mimi has been emancipated, and we already have her memoirs.
Then, Winter became an emancipated minor last year, though she still lives with her sister's family.
Once the slave of arbitrariness, Bjørn has emancipated himself only by a sovereign exaggeration of arbitrariness.
To be emancipated and to really feel empowered is something that is integral to my existence.
By the 1990s, far more Iranian women were "emancipated" than had ever been under the shah.
Members of the emancipated class were no longer slaves, but they were not quite free either.
Unlike most of those convention delegates who had owned slaves, however, Dickinson already had emancipated his.
"I expect you have reference to my having emancipated the slaves in my proclamation," he replied.
Besides, the many catastrophic impacts of marriage before 18 don't disappear if a child is emancipated.
Each is drawn to Monrovia — where Africans, both indigenous tribes and those emancipated from enslavement — maintain autonomy.
Eventually emancipated from the desk, Florence passed into an upper echelon, floating out into the Info-sphere.
Winter announced she had officially become an emancipated minor in May 2015, ending years of custody drama.
This is true in the legal sense; Winter was emancipated in 2014 when she was only 16.
He never emancipated himself from his parents or went on an underage bender at the Viper Room.
When Winter was 17, her sister was given custody of the actress before she became fully emancipated.
The only exception is 16- and 17-year-olds who have been legally emancipated from their parents.
Minnesota mom Anmarie Calgaro filed a lawsuit in 2016 after her daughter emancipated herself and started transitioning.
"Digital technology virtually emancipated us," said Mr. Diaz, who is known for his experimental slow-cinema style.
He emancipated the Catholics, founded the London police force, reduced tariffs on wheat, sugar and ultimately corn.
The fact that she, an emancipated black woman, could even purchase property is also amazing, he says.
Nearly a year has passed since Ariel Winter became legally emancipated, and she has come a long way.
The actress is now emancipated from her mother after the courts granted her request in May of 2015.
After the Civil War, the emancipated slaves of the Georgia Sea Islands gained temporary ownership of coastal lands.
This Jane is "emancipated from the conventional tropes of the ballet heroine," Judith Mackrell wrote in The Guardian.
The Russian Revolution in February 1917 was greeted with calls for new music to celebrate the newly-emancipated Russia.
Ten percent of people using Frank are students who are veterans, emancipated minors, or are emerging from foster care.
The bomb thrown in 1881 at Tsar Alexander II, who had emancipated the serfs, woefully stymied reform in Russia.
Certainly the café could be the foundation of emancipated life—that was why Agnon's generation rushed there so ardently.
It makes perfect sense that the Islamic State would hate this megalopolis, so progressive and tolerant, emancipated and teeming.
Well, it emancipated me from the belief that the American dream was always what we say it is today.
The untold story of the Wild West's black cowboys When Americans started settling the West, many emancipated African Americans followed.
I lived in that group home until I was emancipated on my 17th birthday and moved out on my own.
These vary from permission from a judge, parental consent, or a so-called emancipated minor legally freed from parental oversight.
At Apple's Worldwide Developers Conference in June, though, the company finally emancipated the iPad from the rules of the iPhone.
It's been a great run: I wasn't emasculated by my spouse's ability to earn a family wage, I was emancipated.
Eventually she made her way to Hollywood and was emancipated from her parents before she was old enough to drive.
What was a trickle in 19803 became a flood by 1864, as thousands of self-emancipated slaves followed Union soldiers.
His noblewoman is headstrong and emancipated—almost a millennial—who dreams of a storybook lover and self-harms in secret.
While the government of Israel was ambivalent about whether to retain the newly emancipated areas, the settler movement was not.
And there is no place for innovation without tradition, which might be reinterpreted, challenged, turned upside down, adapted, or emancipated.
Mr. Montgomery fled when he was about to be shipped to Virginia and began legal proceedings to be emancipated in Scotland.
The Yale Center for British Art acquired Yinka Shonibare MBE's sculpture "Mrs Pinckney and the Emancipated Birds of South Carolina" (22017).
The years-long family drama eventually culminated in Gray becoming Winter's guardian, and the star became an emancipated minor in 2015.
Jada Pinkett Smith says she was "devastated" when her son Jaden asked to be legally emancipated at the age of 15.
In the interim — after she was emancipated and before she purchased her first home — Winter lived with her sister Shanelle Gray.
Eating disorders first took root in the Japan in the 1980s—around the time women became more emancipated in the workplace.
This rattles Rachel — she's a leader, not a subject, and was officially emancipated from being neolution property a long time ago.
The afternoon is dedicated to the women of the 18th and 19th centuries, who were sufficiently emancipated to be regular correspondents.
Questions about whether a child should be emancipated or otherwise legally separated from their parents are the domain of the courts.
All cut from black paper by the able hand of Kara Elizabeth Walker, an Emancipated Negress and leader in her Cause.
" The usual rounds of celebratory music, marching and fireworks must be abandoned until "the millions of our oppressed countrymen are emancipated.
He wanted the emancipated slaves to be able to profit in the future from the achievements of the advanced French civilization.
United we are stronger, and you are certainly not going to be emancipated as a gay person if others are not.
She doctored my birth certificate to say I was a year older, so I was emancipated when I was 13, not 14.
After the event, the jerseys will be auctioned for Echoes of Hope, a nonprofit that benefits at-risk and emancipated foster youth.
"Autonomous" refers to the state of the book's emancipated robots, who are originally indentured to pay for the cost of their creation.
A Minnesota mother who sued when her emancipated teen daughter started transitioning now wants to take her case to the Supreme Court.
Hence his concern with the extreme, unworldly, uncompromising character of the thinking of many who believe they have emancipated themselves from Christianity.
Georgia raised the minimum age for marriage from 16 to 17, but only if a 17-year-old is emancipated from their parents.
I thought about my great-grandfather, Thomas Thrasher, who might have been about the size of the kids depicted when he was emancipated.
The girl would have to persuade a judge that she should be legally emancipated and that the marriage was in her best interest.
When her mom found out about it, she tried to intervene but was surprised to find that her daughter had become legally emancipated.
It was about a lapsed author emancipated from her husband by writing a successful roman à clef based on her passionate sex life.
She emancipated herself from her family at the age of 16 and sought solace in books, particularly scientific literature, to understand her symptoms.
She's literally emancipated herself — and she'd like to take a few fellow harlequins with her: Huntress, Black Canary, Renee Montoya, and Cassandra Cain.
Americans emancipated themselves from British royal rule in 1776, but that doesn&apost mean they don&apost still have opinions about the monarchy.
My mother passed away when I was 15, and retail jobs allowed me to support myself and my nephew after I was emancipated.
The actress has an older brother Jimmy Workman and older sister Shanelle Workman-Gray, who became her guardian in 2012 before Winter was emancipated.
For instance, even those who are not 24 can qualify if they are legally emancipated, married, have a dependent, or serve in the military.
More recently, Modern Family actress Ariel Winter successfully filed to become legally emancipated from her mother, who was accused of emotional and physical abuse.
Young, moderate Muslims fretted that banning headscarves would make it harder for girls from conservative families to be "emancipated" through education in mainstream schools.
After Ms. Stockton was emancipated, the report said, Mr. Green encouraged her religious education and missionary work in what is now known as Hawaii.
In any event, one of the lovely things about being a grown-up is that one is emancipated from the yoke of required reading.
It is hard to find Jews who are not proudly erudite, emancipated, attending synagogue only sporadically, comfortable with intermarriage, identified with the Democratic Party.
Leaders of the town, which was settled by newly emancipated slaves, rejected suggestions from state officials to move the entire community to higher ground.
The monument area includes locations related to the Lincoln Administration's Port Royal Experiment, such as one of the country's first schools for emancipated people.
It's been nearly a year since Ariel Winter was emancipated from her mother ... and it looks like she's doing just fine on her own.
They're trying to humiliate me and reinforce their dominance over me, on the off chance that I've forgotten, I'm emancipated, or I'm a *gasp* lesbian.
They are helping to promote an educated and emancipated elite that could gradually begin to change the system, which is what happened in the 1980s.
Still, any attempt at cooperation with the victorious North and the newly emancipated slaves ran afoul of the growing "Lost Cause" movement in the South.
Back in May 2015, Ariel Winter was officially emancipated from her mother, Chrystal Workman, who she alleges both physically and emotionally abused her growing up.
He illuminated places like India and his native Trinidad by saying what few wished to say about the newly emancipated colonies of the third world.
And nearly 60 percent of young men who age out of the foster care system and are legally emancipated have been convicted of a crime.
At another point he had planned to take Anna to Mexico, where she would be married, so that she could be emancipated from his parents.
In 18683, Andrew Johnson, Lincoln's successor, welcomed former Confederates back into the Union, many of whom sought to re-establish control over emancipated African-Americans.
So you're saying that the federal government at that time was only supplying 100 doctors to serve the entire emancipated population of 4 million people?
At the time the play was written, the Russian aristocracy was in twilight, the serfs had been emancipated, swaths of the taiga were being deforested.
We are the party that emancipated the slaves and led the fight in the Civil War to end and abolish slavery once and for all.
Feldman was declared legally emancipated from his parents when he was 2500, though he'd lost the entirety of his acting fortune, save for a modest $2810,221.
Google's YouTube requests users be over 18 but will accept users 13 and older if they have parental consent or if they are an emancipated minor.
The top spot once again went to Abraham Lincoln — the quintessential self-made man who saved the Union, emancipated the slaves, and launched the Transcontinental Railroad.
" He "believed slave labor indispensable for Texas to flourish" and "believed that if slaves were emancipated they would turn into 'vagabonds, a nuisance and a menace.
Adventurous Tunisians come to contemporary art not only to have fun, but also to flirt with non-theist ideas and become, in spirit, ever more emancipated.
It included a surprising four chapters about the colonization movement, which aimed to resettle free black people and emancipated slaves on the west coast of Africa.
"Women are getting more educated, they're more emancipated, they're more independent," said Prannoy Roy, co-founder of India's NDTV news channel and a veteran poll analyst.
"The euro zone has emancipated itself from global tendencies, as the assessment for other world regions is by no means unequivocal," Sentix said in a statement.
Texas recently passed a bill, similar to one Virginia passed last year, to end most child marriage, but both states still allow emancipated minors to marry.
The true charge against Johnson was that he opposed the 14th and 15th Amendments and the agenda of the Radical Republicans to enfranchise the emancipated slaves.
The man who owned him, also presumed to have been his father, emancipated him at age 215, an act Mississippi made very difficult and later banned.
Currently, Virginia, Texas, and New York are the only states to limit marriage to adults who are 18 or older, as well as court-emancipated minors.
After her guardianship was transferred from her mother, Christoula Workman, to her sister, Shanelle Gray, in 2014, Winter successfully petitioned to become an emancipated minor last May.
Kiyan Williams presents a hauntingly poetic tribute, called "Untitled (For My Great Great Great Great Great Grandmother Salmoy Miller who was Emancipated from slavery in 1834)" (2019).
Later, she emancipated herself at age 15 from her mother, and remained focused on finding ways to achieve her educational goals, like selling knives door-to-door.
Our sober discussions of boundaries, insecurities, needs, and desires are a stark contrast to the sexually emancipated free-for-all that many people imagine polyamory to be.
According to an article published in The Montgomery Advertiser, after Redoshi was freed she remained on the plantation with the Smiths, which was common for emancipated people.
"Women are getting more educated, they're more emancipated, they're more independent," said Prannoy Roy, a co-founder of India's NDTV news channel and a veteran poll analyst.
"She Would Be King" is an ambitious and expansive novel that explores the nuances of Liberian history beyond its identity as a settlement for emancipated African-Americans.
In the 1870 census, the first after the enslaved were emancipated, several Southern states were majority black and several others were within striking distance of that marker.
It said that the government would take 400,000 acres that it had seized from the Confederacy and split it up among those thousands of newly emancipated people.
Many of the bills, including the bill proposed in South Dakota, limit both patients who've been emancipated and children who have parental consent to receive the treatments.
And for him personally, he would likely feel emancipated to truly unleash the perspectives he holds on Trump and the culture war this country is engaged in.
In those works and this one, Mr. Barney seems to be forging a more emancipated kind of collaboration, more trusting that another body can replace his own.
McCray wrote on her Instagram: ''The same year that my now-home, Gracie Mansion, was built, New York State passed an act that emancipated the enslaved Africans. Gradually.
Winter had her guardianship transferred from her mother, Christoula Workman, to her sister, Shanelle Gray, in 2014 and successfully petitioned to become an emancipated minor in May 2015.
Ariel Winter has been emancipated from her mom since 2015, but their years-long family drama appears to still be a sore subject between the mother and daughter.
As freed people entered the market economy — as wage earners, fruit stand vendors, and emancipated hustlers — they sold watermelons in public squares and pocketed the money for themselves.
Before the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991, the authorities in Kyrgyzstan and the other four Soviet republics of Central Asia claimed to have emancipated the region's formerly downtrodden women.
When Marin showed up for his first day of work at Bankers Trust, the fusty financial sector had been newly emancipated by the deregulation regime of the Nixon administration.
The idea had been that as any emancipated woman might, she could incorporate menswear into her outfits and look great in it, almost like an 18th-century Katharine Hepburn.
And the school provides an optional paid internship program, which is appealing to students, some of whom help support their families or who are legally emancipated and support themselves.
By the time the enslaved were emancipated, they comprised the largest single asset in America: $3 billion in 1860 dollars, more than all the other assets in the country combined.
Tim is supposedly in his early 20s, but he definitely reads more along the lines of an emancipated teenager, akin to the crime-solving teens that star in these books.
The equal-service rule at issue in Masterpiece Cakeshop dates to the late 1800s and first aimed at ensuring that recently emancipated slaves had the freedom to participate in the marketplace.
Colorado's Anti-Discrimination Act, first enacted in 1885 to prohibit discrimination against newly emancipated slaves, promises to all in Colorado the freedom to participate in the public market on equal footing.
Long before the #MeToo movement, Communism succeeded in creating a broad class of women who were independent, emancipated, often better educated and working in more adaptable service jobs than eastern men.
Eastern women, who were part of the work force and with free child care, were more emancipated than their western sisters, and proved to be more mobile than their male counterparts.
One of her longest-running was Cellulite, an emancipated princess who was tired of waiting for her Prince Charming and who became one of the first female antiheroines of French comics.
Winter, 18, became an emancipated minor last year after a long court battle during which the Department of Children and Family Services found evidence of her mom Chrisoula Workman emotionally abusing her.
The equal-service rule dates to 1885, to ensure that recently emancipated slaves could participate in the market While the anti-discrimination law has been updated, the equality principle remains the same.
Instead, he says, concentrate not on familiar landscapes but on their living components; create and embrace novel ecosystems in which creatures expelled or emancipated from their ancestral homes can find new life.
With the abolition of slavery in 1834 came the evolution of Carnival from the society balls of the ruling class to the street festivals of an emancipated people rejoicing in their freedom.
Boycotts erupted on social media as consumers decried the brands while competitors used the moment to stake a claim on the newly emancipated gym-goers in need of a new fitness outlet. 
On the way she drove out of Fort Worth, past a little community founded by a group of emancipated slaves, near the headquarters of an international ministry run by a Gateway elder.
Early in the war, when three fugitive male slaves showed up at the Union stronghold Fortress Monroe, Virginia, the commanding general, Benjamin Butler, effectively emancipated them by declaring them "contraband" of war.
Frances Benjamin Johnston was an emancipated woman and a bohemian, to judge by the 1896 self-portrait in which she is crossing her legs, smoking a cigarette and clutching a beer stein.
On the television show "Thirtysomething," which aired from 1987 to 1991, the all-white cast of characters seemed to be economically emancipated from their parents, who rarely factored into the story lines.
The question was brought back that year because all emancipated slaves, following ratification of the 14th Amendment, were counted as new citizens, and it wasn't clear how many such citizens there might be.
A Minnesota mom is suing her transgender daughter — who has been living as an emancipated teen and whom she still refers to as her "son" — after learning she is seeking gender reassignment care.
Director Sam Levinson, who also wrote the script, tells an updated version of events, replacing 17th century Puritans with anonymous 4chan users, and witches with their 21st century equivalent: sexy, emancipated teenage girls.
I mean, it's obvious that feminism is a worldwide issue, and the degree to which women are emancipated depends greatly on where they were born and live and the colour of their skin.
After the Civil War, these groups of armed whites morphed once more, continuing to harass and terrorize emancipated black Americans, becoming either Klansmen or police (or, not infrequently, both at the same time).
There have always been some people who thought we need hierarchical structures to keep us safe and others who thought we need to be emancipated from oppressive structures so we can be free.
Yet those experiences taught her the importance of sobriety and responsibility, Ms. Adkins said, noting that she became an emancipated minor at 16 and now has custody of her 16-year-old brother.
"For some, for a woman to be emancipated, she must fit into a certain stereotype," said Nadia Marzouki, a political scientist and research fellow at the National Center of Scientific Research in Paris.
But it's the most emancipated work of his career, and it should make a star of Eleanor Bauer, the dancer and choreographer whom he has entrusted with the film's most beautiful movement sequences.
Winter admits she was "hurt" by the online bullying, but it was ultimately the physical pain that led her to decide to undergo breast reduction surgery shortly after becoming an emancipated minor last year.
And Twitty is certain Jefferson's slave and then emancipated chef James Hemings (brother to Sally, Jefferson's slave and purported mother to several of the President's bastard children) had a lot to do with it.
The protagonists in "Lipstick Under My Burkha" are not the coy, virginal women Bollywood has long idolised, nor are they emancipated, modern women who don't need validation from men for the way they live.
The Modern Family star spent years in and out of courts as her guardianship was transferred from her mother to her sister and then, last year, she successfully petitioned to become an emancipated minor.
The bill would make it a misdemeanor for physicians or any medical professionals to perform gender reassignment surgeries on minors or provide patients 16 and younger with hormones, even if the minor is emancipated.
Lincoln "put all his hopes" for ending slavery in the American Colonization Society, which advocated encouraging or requiring free blacks and emancipated slaves to emigrate to Africa, while Adams considered colonization impractical and unethical.
Mr. Slettvet's description of feeling "emancipated" after he decided to "man up" and quit his job so he could care for his first child while his wife earned a living wage is a fitting example.
Russia's "managed democracy" provides a vivid illustration of how institutions and practices that originally emancipated citizens from the whim of unaccountable rulers can be refashioned to effectively disenfranchise citizens (even while allowing them to vote).
An art is emancipated and emancipating when it renounces the authority of the imposed message, the target audience, and the univocal mode of explicating the world, when, in other words, it stops wanting to emancipate us.
Evelyn Berezin, a computer pioneer who emancipated many a frazzled secretary from the shackles of the typewriter nearly a half-century ago by building and marketing the first computerized word processor, died on Saturday in Manhattan.
There are situations where a minor can consent — if married, legally emancipated or on active military duty, or after a sexual assault by a family member — but these apply to only a small minority of teenage mothers.
"I have been so loyal to the point where people are like looking at me like something is wrong," she continued, adding that leaving the White House made her feel like she had "been emancipated" from a "plantation."
Though not a direct homage to the Confederacy, the monument commemorated Supreme Court Justice Roger B. Taney, author of the infamous Dred Scott decision, which upheld unrestricted slave ownership, preventing slaves and emancipated blacks from becoming US citizens.
In lieu of any liberation from injustice, he has emancipated the darkest of emotions; he has licensed his supporters to explicitly hate a range of people from perfidious Pakistanis and Indian Muslims to their "anti-national" Indian appeasers.
Nkrumah Steward, a descendant of slaves, sat down for dinner with Robert Adams, a descendant of the people who owned Steward's family until they were emancipated in 23, at the very South Carolina plantation where both families once lived.
In her interview with THR, Winter told the outlet that her mother — a one-time aspiring actress from whom she legally emancipated herself at age 14 — would often agree to things that made the now 19-year-old uncomfortable.
Directed by Max Winkler (Ceremony), who co-wrote the script along with Alex McCauley and Matt Spicer (Ingrid Goes West), the dark comedy teeters between an attempt at emancipated womanhood, and the very male gaze it's trying to reject.
Only in the early 1950s did China and India begin to interact as modern governments in a sustained way, bonding over their shared former status as the exploited and downtrodden of Western Imperialism and the newly-emancipated developing world.
The director, Andy Borst, looked into it and found that she had legally emancipated herself from her parents—a process that is intended to protect kids from abuse, but does not require any such abuse to have taken place.
Established by a white former slaveholder from Alabama who married an emancipated slave, the chapel and two family cemeteries were founded after Nathaniel Jackson, Matilda Hicks, and 11 other freed slaves fled Alabama's Fugitive Slave Act in the 1850s.
He started his term as president by angering the Radical Republicans and betraying the emancipated slaves, pardoning Confederates at a breakneck pace of almost 100 a day and insisting that black suffrage was a matter for states to decide.
On the religious conception, regardless of how satisfying and emancipated our shared life becomes, we're always going to long for something beyond this world, for eternal rest, whether the emptiness and stillness of nirvana or the harmony of heaven.
The Jews of the Hapsburg lands, for instance, sustained a powerful sense of loyalty to the long-lived Emperor Franz Joseph, who emancipated them as citizens in the 220s and protected them from persecution until his death in 1916.
The Reconstruction monument includes several sites near Beaufort, S.C., which fell under control of the Union Army in November 1861, and became one of the first places where emancipated slaves voted, bought property and created churches, schools and businesses.
He owned nine slaves, but emancipated four and issued "manumission papers" — a legal promise of eventual freedom — to others, and had none by the time he joined the court, said Jennifer Winter, who manages the Taney house for the historical society.
Between 1974 and 1984, Kikoïne shot dozens of movies capturing the wild side of a generation that had just been liberated by the anti-Establishment revolution of May 1968, emancipated by the contraceptive pill, and not yet wrecked by AIDS.
They were emerging from the ferment of the Haskalah, the Jewish Enlightenment, in which thinkers like Moses Mendelssohn searched for ways that Jews, freshly emancipated in Western Europe, could embrace the new secular gods of rationality and progress and nation.
The Union Pacific — manned by Irishmen, Civil War veterans and emancipated slaves — would advance across Nebraska toward Central Pacific tracks forged by Chinese laborers starting in Sacramento, across the Sierra Nevada Mountains to the Mormon settlements near the Great Salt Lake.
The move comes months after the local city council voted to drop the official holiday celebrating his birthday, April 85033, in place of Liberation and Freedom Day on March 3, which marks the day in 1865 when Union troops emancipated slaves.
Lowndes County is part of the Black Belt—the swathe of land named for its fertile topsoil which produced vast amounts of cotton on the back of slave labour and, later, sharecropping, and where emancipated black workers farmed rented land.
Gibbs recalls attending St. Augustine Catholic Church, founded by a group of emancipated blacks, and Metropolitan AME Church, where Frederick Douglass was eulogized, as well as New Bethel Baptist Church, where civil rights activist and congressman Walter Fauntroy was pastor.
Turner was born into slavery and emancipated as a toddler; even though he and Mamie were both trained as teachers, post-Reconstruction Mississippi continually cut funding to black schools, so Turner worked as a carpenter and Mamie as a laundress.
The images that perhaps most poignantly capture white America's feelings about race, which remain unresolved to this day, are Charles Paxson's and M.H. Kimball's carte-de-visites of children who traveled as emancipated slaves on the abolitionist circuit during the Civil War.
Though not a direct homage to the Confederacy, the monument commemorated Supreme Court Justice Roger B. Taney, author of the infamous Dred Scott decision, which upheld unrestricted slave ownership, and ruled that slaves and emancipated black individuals could not be US citizens.
"I got married because I met a guy when I was 17 and newly emancipated from my mother who gave me a sense of normalcy and stability," said Frances, who had filed for divorce in March 2016 after 21 months of marriage.
So far, only Virginia, Texas, and New York have addressed this issue, passing laws that do not allow anyone who is a legal child to get married (though a minor who has been emancipated and given the full rights of an adult can).
"We have pity on (Trump) for his ignorance of what the Haitian people, the emancipated slaves, brought to humanity in terms of the experience and the determination to fight for freedom," said Gabriel Fortune, mayor of the southern city of Les Cayes.
It occurs to me that an image of a Black man peering out of a partially lifted up manhole cover (which has been used for the cover of Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man) can signify Black people who are emancipated legally, but still marginalized socially.
Though she's been open with the public about her rocky relationship with her parents and her decision to become emancipated from them in 2015 — which legally makes her an adult — she's still often criticized for wearing clothing or making decisions too risqué for her age.
Inspired by the 1865 US emancipation of slaves (the French had finally emancipated theirs in 1848), Laboulaye in 1875 commissioned a statue that would link the emancipation of slaves with the values of the French Enlightenment, newly revived in the Third Republic of 1870.
These images seem to be taken from something like amateur pornography, slightly sado-masochistic pornography, and the objects are bleeding, so there's something to do with physical materiality, representation of a kind of... not an objectified female form but perhaps emancipated through its objectification.
Cullen was gaining renown; the novelist Jessie Fauset was the literary editor of The Crisis; and Jean Toomer's "Cane"—a novel in jagged fragments—had trumpeted the arrival of a new black art, one chained to the fate of a roiling, bullied, "emancipated" people.
" It's a tale as old as time in comic book lore — but not one that Black Canary will stay victim to for long, per Smollett-Bell: "She needs to be emancipated from this state of mind in which she's holding herself back from that power.
"Women in the '80s were much more willing to take risks than the women now, and maybe it had to do with the fact that the women at that time were becoming emancipated" from any kind of control and expressing their sexuality, he said.
In 2016, for example, a Minnesota mother sued her teenager, who was emancipated a year earlier, for beginning the process of transitioning from male to female; the lawsuit challenged a state law that allows minors to access medical care and procedures without the consent of their parents.
The second thing that really needs to be clarified about this so-called "great emancipation" is that Washington only emancipated one man outright, and that's the one person he thought of as exceptional: William "Billy" Lee, who had been his right-hand man in the Revolution.
While Johnson would escape removal from office by a single vote in the Senate, his impeachment reflected the tumult of reconstruction after the Civil War, the future of civil rights for emancipated slaves, and the authority of the presidency versus Congress following the expansion of executive power.
"Tonight my family and I were dinner guests at Wavering Place, an old plantation founded in 1768 near Hopkins, South Carolina, where four generations of my grandmothers lived and worked as slaves when they were emancipated in 1865," Steward wrote in a Facebook post that has received over 2,000 shares.
There was a moment in 1799 when, seeing an opportunity to curry favor with the British Empire and the hostile Americans, he treacherously betrayed an antislavery conspiracy in Jamaica — a coldblooded act if ever there was one, even if it served the narrow interest of the emancipated slaves in Saint-Domingue.
When Howard—one of the largest of the hundred and two historically black colleges and universities, or H.B.C.U.s, in the United States—was founded, in 1867, it was supported by the Freedman's Bureau, the federal agency charged with helping emancipated black people navigate the world that awaited them after the Civil War.
He stands in a long line of people who have loved the land; the Congaree, a Native American tribe that first called the lowland home; European explorers and plantation owners, emancipated African-Americans who bought some of the land they had once worked while enslaved and the Chicago lumber baron Francis Beidler.
Turkish artist Köken Ergun, a filmmaker and researcher, became interested in the Turkish Olympics around 2008, after seeing a viral Facebook post of a Mongolian student reading a Turkish nationalistic poem in front of a large audience of Turkish politicians and the "middle class" (a newly minted concept for a neo-conservative emancipated working class in Turkey).
Far from being a charming idiosyncrasy of his mother's, the tropism of Eastern Jews toward France was one of the magnetic pulls of the period: Paris was the great light of emancipated Jewish life, and it was not as eccentric as Gary needed to pretend for his mother to dream of his making a life there.
The council unanimously decided in a separate vote that Liberation and Freedom Day will be celebrated on March 85033, the day U.S. Army forces arrived in 1865 and emancipated enslaved people at the end of the Civil War, according to the AP. Jefferson's legacy is prominent in Charlottesville, where he founded the University of Virginia, CBS 19 News reported.
So it should not be surprising that countries so recently emancipated would embrace the project of European Union liberalism only insofar as it does not seem to threaten either their long-traduced sovereignty or their just-reclaimed identity, and would be wary of a cosmopolitan vision that seems like it could dissolve what they so recently have gained.
It is a little shocking to learn from Girard that at an early point in the revolution, when the antislavery cause seemed on the verge of collapse, L'Ouverture broached the idea of betraying his own emancipated followers by leading them back into bondage, in the hope of getting official protection for himself and one of his comrades.
"Unbelievably, Minnesota statutes authorize a county to deem a minor 'emancipated' to receive welfare payments to live on their own and allow medical providers to void parental input if it determines the minor is living apart from the parents and is managing his or her own personal financial affairs," Erick Kaardal, an attorney for the Thomas More Society, said in a statement.
Read more:A mom who sued her emancipated daughter for transitioning is trying to take her case to the Supreme CourtA prominent transgender YouTube star was deadnamed at a panel on LGBTQ activism, and it sparked a big discussion and several apologiesScarlett Johansson defends her comments about 'politically correct' casting and says backlash was thanks to 'click bait'Medical treatments for transgender people in the US can cost over $100K, even with insurance.
One woman who worked in Kenya in the 1990s, Sister Paola Moggi, told the AP: "I have found in Africa sisters who are absolutely emancipated and who say what they think to a priest...I have also found sisters who said 'Well, you have to understand their needs, and that while we only have a monthly cycle a man has a continuous cycle of sperm' — verbatim words from the '90s."
The museum's mouthful of a name—and its inelegant initialism, N.M.A.A.H.C.—testifies to a bureaucratic slog that began in 1915, when black veterans of the Union Army, together in Washington to celebrate the fiftieth anniversary of the war's end, and fed up with the discrimination they found in the capital city, organized a "colored citizens' committee" to build a monument to the civic contributions of their recently emancipated people.
As Cheryl has just learned of her inheritance, she gets up to give a speech as Cheryl is prone to do and it is reminiscent of Jason's funeral (I half expected her to drop some kind of bomb like she wanted be emancipated from Penelope!) Instead, it's simply a speech that speaks to her desire to clear the Blossom name of all the bloodshed and madness and as she speaks in walks Clifford Blossom (WHAT
"I have found in Africa sisters who are absolutely emancipated and who say what they think to a priest they meet who might ask to have sex with them," she told the AP. "I have also found sisters who said &aposWell, you have to understand their needs, and that while we only have a monthly cycle a man has a continuous cycle of sperm&apos — verbatim words from the &apos90s," she said.
Just as I am convinced that Puryear is deeply knowledgeable of the history of the Phyrgian cap — the Roman symbol of an emancipated slave, which can be seen as a precursor to the hoodie, and which has been the source of a number of his sculptures, including "Big Phyrigian" (2010–14) — I am sure that he knows a lot about the history of nose rings and the significance they possess in different cultures.
As she wrote to a friend, Carole Roffe: Somebody asked me who my favorite women writers were the other day, meaning, I guess, some kind of writers who expressed a specifically feminine sensibility—I said Emily Bronte, who's pure butch, and cursed myself afterwards because the greatest feminine writer who's ever lived is Dostoevsky, followed closely by Herman Melville, who has just the kind of relish of beautiful boys that emancipated ladies such as yourself express.

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