Black Women's Intellectual Traditions - Speaking Their Minds
portes grátis
Black Women's Intellectual Traditions - Speaking Their Minds
Conaway, Carol B.; Waters, Kristin
Brandeis University Press
11/2022
496
Mole
Inglês
9781684581412
15 a 20 dias
576
Descrição não disponível.
Preface to New Edition
Acknowledgments
Introduction - Carol B. Conaway and Kristin Waters
PART I: MARIA W. STEWART: BLACK FEMINISM IN PUBLIC PLACES
1. Maria W. Stewart: America's First Black Woman Political Writer - Marilyn Richardson
2. Maria W. Stewart and the Rhetoric of Black Preaching: Perspectives on Womanism and Black Nationalism - Lena Ampadu
3. A Woman Made of Words: The Rhetorical Invention of Maria W. Stewart - Ebony A. Utley
4. "No Throw-away Woman": Maria W. Stewart as a Forerunner of Black Feminist Thought - R. Dianne Bartlow
PART II: INCIDENTS IN THE LIVES: FREE WOMEN AND SLAVES
5. "Hear My Voice, Ye Careless Daughters": Narratives of Slave and Free Women before Emancipation - Hazel V. Carby
6. Literary Societies: The Work of Self-Improvement and Racial Uplift - Michelle N. Garfield
7. "A Sign unto This Nation": Sojourner Truth, History, Orature, and Modernity - Carla L. Peterson
PART III: HARPERS, HOPKINS, AND SHADD CARY: WRITING OUR WAY TO FREEDOM
8. Narrative Patternings of Resistance in Frances E. W. Harper's Iola Leroy and Pauline Hopkins' Contending Forces - Vanessa Holford Diana
9. "We Are All Bound Up Together": Frances Harper and Feminist Theory - Valerie Palmer-Mehta
10. Mary Ann Shadd Cary: A Visionary of the Black Press - Carol B. Conaway
PART IV: ANNA JULIA COOPER: A VOICE
11. Anna Julia Cooper: A Voice from the South - Mary Helen Washington
12. A Singing Something: Womanist Reflections on Anna Julia Cooper - Karen Baker-Fletcher
13. Arguing from Difference: Cooper, Emerson, Guizot, and a More Harmonious America - Janice W. Fernheimer
PART V: LEADERSHIP, ACTIVISM, AND THE GENIUS OF IDA B. WELLS
14. "I Rose and Found My Voice": Claiming "Voice" in the Rhetoric of Ida B. Wells - Olga Idriss Davis
15. The Emergence of a Black Feminist Leadership Model: African-American Women and Political Activism in the Nineteenth Century - Melina Abdullah
16. Shadowboxing: Liberation Limbos-Ida B. Wells - Joy James
PART VI: BLACK FEMINIST THEORY: FROM THE NINETEENTH CENTURY TO THE TWENTY-FIRST
17. Some Core Themes of Nineteenth-Century Black Feminism - Kristin Waters
18. The Politics of Black Feminist Thought - Patricia Hill Collins
19. Black Feminist Theory: Charting a Course for Black Women's Studies in Political Science - Evelyn M. Simien
Selected Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction - Carol B. Conaway and Kristin Waters
PART I: MARIA W. STEWART: BLACK FEMINISM IN PUBLIC PLACES
1. Maria W. Stewart: America's First Black Woman Political Writer - Marilyn Richardson
2. Maria W. Stewart and the Rhetoric of Black Preaching: Perspectives on Womanism and Black Nationalism - Lena Ampadu
3. A Woman Made of Words: The Rhetorical Invention of Maria W. Stewart - Ebony A. Utley
4. "No Throw-away Woman": Maria W. Stewart as a Forerunner of Black Feminist Thought - R. Dianne Bartlow
PART II: INCIDENTS IN THE LIVES: FREE WOMEN AND SLAVES
5. "Hear My Voice, Ye Careless Daughters": Narratives of Slave and Free Women before Emancipation - Hazel V. Carby
6. Literary Societies: The Work of Self-Improvement and Racial Uplift - Michelle N. Garfield
7. "A Sign unto This Nation": Sojourner Truth, History, Orature, and Modernity - Carla L. Peterson
PART III: HARPERS, HOPKINS, AND SHADD CARY: WRITING OUR WAY TO FREEDOM
8. Narrative Patternings of Resistance in Frances E. W. Harper's Iola Leroy and Pauline Hopkins' Contending Forces - Vanessa Holford Diana
9. "We Are All Bound Up Together": Frances Harper and Feminist Theory - Valerie Palmer-Mehta
10. Mary Ann Shadd Cary: A Visionary of the Black Press - Carol B. Conaway
PART IV: ANNA JULIA COOPER: A VOICE
11. Anna Julia Cooper: A Voice from the South - Mary Helen Washington
12. A Singing Something: Womanist Reflections on Anna Julia Cooper - Karen Baker-Fletcher
13. Arguing from Difference: Cooper, Emerson, Guizot, and a More Harmonious America - Janice W. Fernheimer
PART V: LEADERSHIP, ACTIVISM, AND THE GENIUS OF IDA B. WELLS
14. "I Rose and Found My Voice": Claiming "Voice" in the Rhetoric of Ida B. Wells - Olga Idriss Davis
15. The Emergence of a Black Feminist Leadership Model: African-American Women and Political Activism in the Nineteenth Century - Melina Abdullah
16. Shadowboxing: Liberation Limbos-Ida B. Wells - Joy James
PART VI: BLACK FEMINIST THEORY: FROM THE NINETEENTH CENTURY TO THE TWENTY-FIRST
17. Some Core Themes of Nineteenth-Century Black Feminism - Kristin Waters
18. The Politics of Black Feminist Thought - Patricia Hill Collins
19. Black Feminist Theory: Charting a Course for Black Women's Studies in Political Science - Evelyn M. Simien
Selected Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
Liberation;Emancipation;Freedom;Feminism;Feminist
Preface to New Edition
Acknowledgments
Introduction - Carol B. Conaway and Kristin Waters
PART I: MARIA W. STEWART: BLACK FEMINISM IN PUBLIC PLACES
1. Maria W. Stewart: America's First Black Woman Political Writer - Marilyn Richardson
2. Maria W. Stewart and the Rhetoric of Black Preaching: Perspectives on Womanism and Black Nationalism - Lena Ampadu
3. A Woman Made of Words: The Rhetorical Invention of Maria W. Stewart - Ebony A. Utley
4. "No Throw-away Woman": Maria W. Stewart as a Forerunner of Black Feminist Thought - R. Dianne Bartlow
PART II: INCIDENTS IN THE LIVES: FREE WOMEN AND SLAVES
5. "Hear My Voice, Ye Careless Daughters": Narratives of Slave and Free Women before Emancipation - Hazel V. Carby
6. Literary Societies: The Work of Self-Improvement and Racial Uplift - Michelle N. Garfield
7. "A Sign unto This Nation": Sojourner Truth, History, Orature, and Modernity - Carla L. Peterson
PART III: HARPERS, HOPKINS, AND SHADD CARY: WRITING OUR WAY TO FREEDOM
8. Narrative Patternings of Resistance in Frances E. W. Harper's Iola Leroy and Pauline Hopkins' Contending Forces - Vanessa Holford Diana
9. "We Are All Bound Up Together": Frances Harper and Feminist Theory - Valerie Palmer-Mehta
10. Mary Ann Shadd Cary: A Visionary of the Black Press - Carol B. Conaway
PART IV: ANNA JULIA COOPER: A VOICE
11. Anna Julia Cooper: A Voice from the South - Mary Helen Washington
12. A Singing Something: Womanist Reflections on Anna Julia Cooper - Karen Baker-Fletcher
13. Arguing from Difference: Cooper, Emerson, Guizot, and a More Harmonious America - Janice W. Fernheimer
PART V: LEADERSHIP, ACTIVISM, AND THE GENIUS OF IDA B. WELLS
14. "I Rose and Found My Voice": Claiming "Voice" in the Rhetoric of Ida B. Wells - Olga Idriss Davis
15. The Emergence of a Black Feminist Leadership Model: African-American Women and Political Activism in the Nineteenth Century - Melina Abdullah
16. Shadowboxing: Liberation Limbos-Ida B. Wells - Joy James
PART VI: BLACK FEMINIST THEORY: FROM THE NINETEENTH CENTURY TO THE TWENTY-FIRST
17. Some Core Themes of Nineteenth-Century Black Feminism - Kristin Waters
18. The Politics of Black Feminist Thought - Patricia Hill Collins
19. Black Feminist Theory: Charting a Course for Black Women's Studies in Political Science - Evelyn M. Simien
Selected Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Acknowledgments
Introduction - Carol B. Conaway and Kristin Waters
PART I: MARIA W. STEWART: BLACK FEMINISM IN PUBLIC PLACES
1. Maria W. Stewart: America's First Black Woman Political Writer - Marilyn Richardson
2. Maria W. Stewart and the Rhetoric of Black Preaching: Perspectives on Womanism and Black Nationalism - Lena Ampadu
3. A Woman Made of Words: The Rhetorical Invention of Maria W. Stewart - Ebony A. Utley
4. "No Throw-away Woman": Maria W. Stewart as a Forerunner of Black Feminist Thought - R. Dianne Bartlow
PART II: INCIDENTS IN THE LIVES: FREE WOMEN AND SLAVES
5. "Hear My Voice, Ye Careless Daughters": Narratives of Slave and Free Women before Emancipation - Hazel V. Carby
6. Literary Societies: The Work of Self-Improvement and Racial Uplift - Michelle N. Garfield
7. "A Sign unto This Nation": Sojourner Truth, History, Orature, and Modernity - Carla L. Peterson
PART III: HARPERS, HOPKINS, AND SHADD CARY: WRITING OUR WAY TO FREEDOM
8. Narrative Patternings of Resistance in Frances E. W. Harper's Iola Leroy and Pauline Hopkins' Contending Forces - Vanessa Holford Diana
9. "We Are All Bound Up Together": Frances Harper and Feminist Theory - Valerie Palmer-Mehta
10. Mary Ann Shadd Cary: A Visionary of the Black Press - Carol B. Conaway
PART IV: ANNA JULIA COOPER: A VOICE
11. Anna Julia Cooper: A Voice from the South - Mary Helen Washington
12. A Singing Something: Womanist Reflections on Anna Julia Cooper - Karen Baker-Fletcher
13. Arguing from Difference: Cooper, Emerson, Guizot, and a More Harmonious America - Janice W. Fernheimer
PART V: LEADERSHIP, ACTIVISM, AND THE GENIUS OF IDA B. WELLS
14. "I Rose and Found My Voice": Claiming "Voice" in the Rhetoric of Ida B. Wells - Olga Idriss Davis
15. The Emergence of a Black Feminist Leadership Model: African-American Women and Political Activism in the Nineteenth Century - Melina Abdullah
16. Shadowboxing: Liberation Limbos-Ida B. Wells - Joy James
PART VI: BLACK FEMINIST THEORY: FROM THE NINETEENTH CENTURY TO THE TWENTY-FIRST
17. Some Core Themes of Nineteenth-Century Black Feminism - Kristin Waters
18. The Politics of Black Feminist Thought - Patricia Hill Collins
19. Black Feminist Theory: Charting a Course for Black Women's Studies in Political Science - Evelyn M. Simien
Selected Bibliography
Notes on Contributors
Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.