Black Women in White America: A Documentary History
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Recipient of the 2002 Bruce Catton Prize for Lifetime Achievement in Historical Writing. In this “stunning collection of documents” (Washington Post Book World), African-American women speak of themselves, their lives, ambitions, and struggles from the colonial period to the present day. Theirs are stories of oppression and survival, of family and community self-help, of inspiring heroism and grass-roots organizational continuity in the face of racism, economic hardship, and, far too often, violence. Their vivid accounts, their strong and insistent voices, make for inspiring reading, enriching our understanding of the American past. “A very timely and powerful collection which gives emphasis to the magnificent role of Black women in the struggle of Black people to survive in this, the United States,”—Nathan Irvin Huggins “Gerda Lerner has collected . . . material which can change images that whites have had of Blacks, and possibly even those which we, as Blacks, have of ourselves,”—Maya Angelou
Additional information
Weight | 0.54 kg |
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Dimensions | 3.73 × 13.18 × 3.62 cm |
by | |
Format | Paperback |
Language | |
Pages | 672 |
Publisher | |
Year Published | 1992-11-17 |
Imprint | |
Publication City/Country | USA |
ISBN 10 | 0679743146 |
About The Author | Gerda Lerner (1920–2013) was a prominent historian, activist, educator, writer, and one of the founders of the study of women's history. She received her PhD in history from Columbia University, and at her first academic post at Sarah Lawrence College, she developed the first graduate program in women's history. She went on to teach at University of Wisconsin–Madison, where she created the first PhD program in women's history in the United States. Lerner is the editor of Black Women in White America: A Documentary History, and is the author of many publications, including The Creation of Patriarchy and Why History Matters: Life and Thought. |
"Gerda Lerner has collected…material which can change images that whites have had of Blacks, and possibly even those which we, as Blacks, have of ourselves."–Maya Angelou |
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Table Of Content | PrefaceAcknowledgmentsNotes on SourcesAn Introduction, by Mary McLeod Bethune1. SLAVERYPurchase and SaleBill of Sale of Abraham Van Vleeck (1811)Mrs. Blankenship Wishes to Buy a Slave Girl (1863)Moses Grandy's Wife Is Sold (1844)A Slave Dealer's Sale Receipts (1863)A Mother Is Sold Away from Her Children A Slave Mother Succees in Returning to Her Family (1846)A Slave Shams Illness to Stay with Her Husband (1847)Tell It Like It WasDaily Life of Plantation SlavesThe Slaves' Garden Plot (1836)A House Slave's Family Life (1861)A Seamstress Is Punished (1839)The Daily Life of House Slaves (1839)I Wasn't Crying 'Bout Mistress, I Was Crying 'Cause the White Bread Was Gone, Martha HarrisonThe Struggle for Survival—Day-to-Day ResistanceSneaking an Education: Memories of a Contraband, Susie King TaylorFoolin' Massa: Memories of a ContrabandShe Finally Went to School That One Night, Josephine Thomas WhiteA Slave Woman Runs a Midnight School, Milla GransonA Slave Mother in BusinessFight, and If You Can't Fight, KickA Mother Purchases Her DaughterRansoming a Woman from Slavery (1859)Stephen and Juba (1838–1839)A Woman's FateThe Way Women Are Treated (1839)The “Breeder Woman” The Nursing Mothers (1836)A Slaveholder's Wife Listens to Her Slaves (1838–1839)The Slaveholder's MistressA Slaveholder Confides to Her DiaryThe Story of Nancy Weston as Told by Her Son (1868)On the Road to FreedomThe Rescue of Jane Johnson (1855)Dramatic Slave Rescues (1855, 1857)The Case of Margaret Garener (1856)The Called Her “Moses,” Harriet Tubman (1860)An Ingenious Escape, Ellen Craft (1848)2. THE STRUGGLE FOR EDUCATIONLearning to TeachTeaching School to Keep Alive, Maria W. Stewart (1832)Establishing a Girls' Department in the Institute for Colored Youth, Sarah Mapps Douglass (1853)Teaching to Become an Educator, Fannie Jackson Coppin (1869)Methods of Instruction, Fannie Jackson Coppin (1913)Teaching the FreedmenA Teacher from the North, Charlotte Forten Grimké (1863)A Former Slave Teaches Black Soldiers, Susie King Taylor (1862)Teachers Wanted (1865)Reports from the Field (1866–1869)Administration of Freedman's Schools (1871)An Example of Teaching Materials Used in Freedmen's Schools in Virginia in (1870)Catechizing Freedmen Children (1869)They Would Not Let Us Have Schools (1871)Schooling in the Jim Crow South, Septima Poinsetta Clark (1916–1928)School FoundersA Progress Report from the Founder of the Haines School, Lucey Loney (1893)Fund Raising for the Palmer Memorial Institute, Charlotte Hawkins Brown (1920–1921)The National Training School for Girls Appeals for Funds, Nannie Burroughs (1929)A College on a Garbage Dump, Mary McLeod Bethune (1941)Another “Begging” Letter, Mary McLeod Bethune (1930)3. A WOMAN'S LOTBlack Women are Sex Objects for White MenThe Married Life of Georgia Peons (1901)We Are Little More Than Slaves (1912)No Protection for Black Girls (1904)Their Rage Was Chiefly Directed Against Men (1963)The Final Solution (1911, 1914)The Myth of the “Bad” Black WomanThe Accusations Are False, Fannie Barrier Williams (1904)A Colored Woman, However Respectable, is Lower Than the White Prostitute, Anonymous (1902)In Defense of Black Women, Elsie Johnson McDougold (1925)The Rape of Black Women as a Weapon of TerrorThe Memphis Riot (1865)KKK Terrror During Reconstruction (1871)Defend Black Women—And Die! The Lynching of Berry Washington (1919) The Case of Mrs. Rosa Lee Ingram and Her Sons (1947–1959)Black Women Attack the Lynching SystemLet There Be Justice, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1891)How to Stop Lynching (1894)A Red Record, Ida B. Wells Barnett (1895)Lynching from a Negro's Point of View, Mary Church Terrell (1904)The Anti-lynching Crusaders (1923)4. MAKING A LIVINGDoing Domestic WorkI Live a Treadmill Life, Anonymous (1912)Slave Markets in New York City (1940)The Domestic Workers' Union (1937)Organizing Domestic Workers in Atlanta, Georgia, Dorothy Bolden (1970)From Service Jobs to the FactoryAn Army Laundress at War, Susie King Taylor (1864)Black Women in the Reconstruction South, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1878)The Negro Woman Worker: 1860–1890, Jean Collier Brown (1931)The Tobacco Workers, Emma L. Shields (1921)Two Million Women at Work, Elizabeth Ross Haynes (1922)Women of the Steel Towns, Mollie V. Lewis (1938)A Black Union Organizer, Sabina Martinez (1941)Organizing at Winston-Salem, North Carolina (1947–1951) Estelle Flowers Luanna Cooper Moranda SmithIt Takes a While to Realize That It Is Discrimination, Florence Rise (1970)5. SURVIVAL IS A FORM OF RESISTANCESomething Told Me Not to Be Afraid, Charlotte Anne Jackson (1865)Three Times Three Cheers for the Gunboat Boys (1863?)A Black Woman Remembers Her Father, Anonymous (1904)A Family Struggles to Keep Going, Frances A. Joseph Gaudet (1868)A Night Watch, Maria L. Baldwin (1863?)I Was a Negro Come of Age, Ellen Tarry (1955)We Want to Live, Not Merely Exist, Mrs. Henry Weddington (1941)Blue Fork Is the Worst Place I Know, Sarah Tuck (1941)I Did Not Really Understand What It Meant to Be a Negro, Daisy Lee Bates (1927)Helping Out Daddy, Louise Meriwether (1967)Am I My Brother's Keeper?, Helen Howard (1965)Having a Baby Inside Me Is the Only Time I'm Really Alive, Anonymous (1964)6. IN GOVERNMENT SERVICE AND POLITICAL LIFEA Pioneer Newspaper Woman, Mary Ann Shadd Cory (1852)Nurse, Spy and Scout, Harriet Tubman (1868, 1898)Opportunities for the Educated Colored Woman, Eva D. Bowles (1923)Government Work in World War I, Mary Church Terrell (1917–1918)“Election Day,” Elizabetgh Piper Ensley (1894)The Negro Woman in Politics, Mrs. Robert A. Patterson (1922)I Accept This Call, Charlotta Bass (1952)Developiong Community Leadership, Ella Baker (1970)The 51% Minority, Shirley Chisholm (1970)7. THE MONSTER PREJUDICEIn the Grip of the MonsterMartyr for Freedom, Amy Spain (1865)I Believe They Despise Us for Our Color, Sarah M. Douglass (1837)When, Oh! When Shall This Cease?, Charlotte Forten Grimké, (1855; 1899)Fighting Jim Crow, Sojourner Truth (approx. 1966)Suing for Her Rights, Charlotte Hawkins Brown (1921)The Small Horrors of Childhood, Anonymous (1904)What It Means to Be Colored in the Capital of the United States, Mary Church Terrell (1907)Traveling Jim Crow, Mahalia Jackson (1966)The Life and Death of Juliette Derricotte (1931)There is No Prejudice in Arkansas (1936)Discrimination on WPA: Black Women Appeal to FDR (1935; 1941)Freedom—Now!The Causes of the Harlem Riot, Nannie Burroughs (1935)Breaking Restrictive Covenants (1948)The Ordeal of Children, Daisy Bates (1962)All I Could Think of Was How Sick Mississippi Whites Were, Anne Moody (1968)8. “LIFTING AS WE CLIMB”From Benevolent Societies to National Club MovementThe Afric-American Female Intelligence Society of Boston (1832)The Beginnings of the National Club Movement, Josesphine St. Pierre Ruffin; Margaret Murray Washington (1895)The Ruffian Incident, Fannie Barrier Williams (1900)Club Activities, NACW Convention (1906)Interracial WorkCooperation on a Community Level (1907)The Colored Women's Statement (1919)Speaking Up for the Race at Memphis (1920)How to Stop Lynchings: A Discussion (1935)Inside a White Organization—The Young Women's Christian AssociationEva Bowles Call for Action (1920)What the Colored Women Are Asking of the YWCA (1920)Too Much Paternalism in “Y's” (1920)Reports by the Secretary For Colored Work, Eva Bowles (1922–1930)Reminiscenceds of a YWCA Worker, Anna Arnold Hedgeman (1924–1938)Grass-Roots WorkPlan of Work: Atlanta Colored Women's War Council, World War I (1918)The Neighborhood Union, Atlanta, Georgia (1908–1932)The Story of the Gate City Free Kindergarten AssociationThe Poor Help Themselves: The Vine City Foundation (1968)Operation Daily Bread: The National Council of Negro Women (1969)9. RACE PRIDEThrow Off Your Fearfulness and Come Forth, Maria W. Stewart (1832)Emigration to Mexico, Anonymous (1832)I Belong to This Race, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1870)Let the Afro-American Depend but on Himself, Ida B. Wells Barnett (1892)The South Is Our Home, Amanda Smith Jemand (1901)Black History Builds Race Price (1933)Please Stop Using the Word “Negro,” Mary Church Terrell (1882; 1922; 1938)Glorify Blackness, Nannie Burroughs (1949)The Only Thing You Can Aspire to is Nationhood, Dara Abubakari (Virginia E. Y. Collins) (1970)10. BLACK WOMEN SPEAK OF WOMANHOODWhat If I Am a Woman?, Maria W. Stewart (1832)I Suppose I Am About the Only Colored Woman That Goes About to Speak for the Rights of Colored Women, Sojourner Truth (1853; 1867)The Colored Woman Should Not Be Ignored, Anna J. Cooper (1892)The New Black Woman, Fannie Barrier Williams (1900)Women As Leaders, Amy-Jacques Garvey (1925)A Century of Progress of Negro Women, Mary McLeod Bethune (1933)The Strength of the Negro Mother, Mahalia Jackson (1966)The Black Woman Is Liberated in Her Own Mind, Dara Abubakari (Virginia E. Y. Collins) (1970)Women's Liberation Has a Different Meaning for Blacks, Renee Ferguson (1970)Jim Crow and Jane Crow, Pauli Murray (1964)Poor Black Women, Patrcia Robinson (1970)Facing the Abortion Question, Shirley Chisholm (1970)I Want the Right to Be Black and Me, Margaret Wright (1970)It's in Your Hands, Fannie Lou Hamer (1971)Bibliograhical Notes |
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