The first of these is characterized by state control of the press and its eventual emancipation from such controls.
This leads to their "eventual emancipation" in the last song, "Tragedy and Triumph".
The stability of his mind, its preternatural composure, was one of the great sanctuaries of the 20th century, a prophecy of the eventual emancipation.
At the very least it would make it a more rationally and humanely organised system likely to be more productive; at best it would provide the conditions for eventual emancipation should that decision finally be made.
Abelard struck a blow for free thought which led to the eventual emancipation of Christendom from the bondage of Ecclesiasticism.
In the North, Revolutionary ideology, the relatively small numbers of slaves and their marginal economic significance combined to produce eventual emancipation.
Consequently, fears of eventual emancipation were much greater in the South than in the North.
Although he was opposed to slavery when initially arriving in the United States, and he advocated for provisions in the Alabama Constitution that permitted the eventual emancipation of slaves, nevertheless he eventually came to be a slave owner himself.
Lee taught her female slaves to read and write and was an advocate of eventual emancipation.