Beyond the Pale: White Women, Racism, and HistoryVerso, 1992 - 263 páginas In this pioneering study, Vron Ware looks at the role of ideas about white women in the history of racism. Her two principal themes are the need to perceive white femininity as a historically constructed category, and the importance of understanding how feminism has developed as a political movement within racist societies. Her goal is to explore political connections between black and white women by dissecting the different meanings of femininity and womanhood. Written in a variety of voices and styles, Beyond the Pale discusses contemporary racism and feminism, developments through the nineteenth century such as the anti-slavery movement, and the British campaign against lynching in the United States. The result is a major contribution to a growing body of anti-racist work which confronts the historical meanings of whiteness and tries to overcome the moralism that so often infuses anti-racism. |
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Resultados 1-3 de 36
Página xiv
... takes the form of a series of interconnected essays which are best read in the order in which they appear . Parts 1 and 5 both deal with contemporary feminism and racism while the three middle sections deal with history . Each of these ...
... takes the form of a series of interconnected essays which are best read in the order in which they appear . Parts 1 and 5 both deal with contemporary feminism and racism while the three middle sections deal with history . Each of these ...
Página 112
... takes the classic abolitionist emblem of the kneeling slave asking , ' Am I Not a Woman and a Sister ? ' and uses it to examine the discourse of the anti - slavery feminists . Thanks , Isaac . 30 ' An Appeal ' , p . 12 . - 31 Douglas ...
... takes the classic abolitionist emblem of the kneeling slave asking , ' Am I Not a Woman and a Sister ? ' and uses it to examine the discourse of the anti - slavery feminists . Thanks , Isaac . 30 ' An Appeal ' , p . 12 . - 31 Douglas ...
Página 180
... take a hundred men and ' shoot down on sight any Negro who appears to be making trouble ' . The white mob swarmed into the grocery , destroying what they could not eat or drink , while the black onlookers were forced to submit to all ...
... take a hundred men and ' shoot down on sight any Negro who appears to be making trouble ' . The white mob swarmed into the grocery , destroying what they could not eat or drink , while the black onlookers were forced to submit to all ...
Contenido
Part Two An Abhorrence of Slavery | 47 |
Part Three Britannias Other Daughters | 117 |
Part Four To Make the Facts Known | 167 |
Derechos de autor | |
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abolition abolitionism abolitionist American Anne Knight Annette Ackroyd Anti-Caste anti-lynching anti-slavery movement appeared argued argument Barbara Birmingham black and white black women Britain British women campaign Catherine Impey Christian civilization Clare Taylor class and gender colonial coloured connections cultural discussion domination Elizabeth Cady Stanton Elizabeth Pease emancipation Empire England English equality example feel felt female femininity feminism feminist Frances Willard Frederick Douglass Harriet Beecher Stowe ideas ideologies images imperialism Indian women involved Isabella Mayo Josephine Butler ladies letter lives London lynching male moral Negro nineteenth century oppression organization Oroonoko pamphlet particular political question race and class race and gender racial racism radical rape reform relations relationship role sexual sisters slave slavery social society struggle suggested Uncle Tom's Cabin University Press Victorian WCTU Wells's white feminists white women woman womanhood women's rights women's suffrage writing wrote