A voice from the South
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
A voice from the South
(The Schomburg library of nineteenth-century black women writers / Henry Louis Gates, Jr., general editor)
Oxford University Press, 1988
- : [hard]
Available at 47 libraries
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Note
Reprint. Originally published: Xenia, Ohio : Aldine Printing House, 1892
Description and Table of Contents
Description
This collection of essays (1891) is an unparalleled statement of black feminist thought in the nineteenth century, and is considered to be one of the original texts of the black feminist movement. Cooper came of age in a period of conservatism in the black community, a time when Afro-American intellectual and political ideas were dominated by men. At the heart of her work is a belief that the status of black women, the most oppressed group of all, is the only true
measure of collective racial progress.
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