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Ar'n't I a Woman?
Ar'n't I a Woman?: Female Slaves in the Plantation South | Deborah Gray White
5 posts | 4 read | 19 to read
Explores the contributions made by enslaved women to the family's economy and suggests they achieved a greater degree of equality with their men than white women
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batsy
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Once again the #TBRtarot helped me get a book off my shelf that's been unread for too long. This is a remarkable piece of scholarship on Black women's lives during slavery in the plantation South. White synthesises a lot of primary resources & archival material to undercut the Jezebel vs. Mammy dichotomy that even popular culture continues to evoke. I appreciate that she restores agency to these women's lives without erasing the horrific reality.

batsy White shows how slave women were not beholden to the regressive moral values that held white bourgeois women in their domestic trap precisely because of the nature of slavery & the gruelling work that it entailed. They broke the gender mold, matching men in all aspects in terms of what they were capable of, but also suffered greater punishments because of it. White writes plainly & presents the facts with empathy. A difficult but readable book. 1y
batsy It also works for #nonficnov and one that I highly recommend! @CBee 1y
CBee Awesome 😊 1y
The_Book_Ninja Great review 1y
91 likes6 stack adds5 comments
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TheBookbabeblog84
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Hitting these black feminist books! #books #womanism #booklover

27 likes1 stack add
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Liatrek
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#riotgrams Blackhistory

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queerbookreader
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I must have picked up an old class copy of somebody's cos there's some underlining and notes in the margins of this copy. I don't mind tho because the previous owner underlined the most important part of this entire introduction!!!

Give this book to your local exclusionary feminist, today. This book is as good as anything to get exclusionary feminists to understand the purpose of practicing intersectionality within feminism.

Lzzzvvvzz 100% agreed! I read this in graduate school and still use it regularly in my own teaching. 6y
melbeautyandbooks Feminism means equality for all. Some folks definitely need to learn or be reminded of this. ❤️ 6y
47 likes2 comments
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BooksForYears
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#AndItsAugust Day 7 - It's History

This is a tremendous work of non-fiction, really investigating the differences between "womanhood" as it applied to slaves and "womanhood" as it applied to everyone else in America.

DreesReads I read this way back in grad school, nearly 20 years ago. 7y
HKGirl This sounds fascinating. Would be a great follow-up to the #gwtwreadalong many of us did! 7y
99 likes9 stack adds2 comments