An edition of "Doers of the word" (1995)

Doers of the word

African-American women speakers and writers in the North (1830-1880)

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Last edited by MARC Bot
July 16, 2024 | History
An edition of "Doers of the word" (1995)

Doers of the word

African-American women speakers and writers in the North (1830-1880)

  • 1 Want to read

Adapting a verse from the Epistle of James - "doers of the word" - nineteenth-century black women activists Sojourner Truth, Jarena Lee, and Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, among others, travelled throughout the Northeastern, Mid-Atlantic, and Midwestern regions of the United States. They preached, lectured, and wrote on issues of religious evangelicism, abolition, racial uplift, moral reform, temperance, and women's rights, thereby defining themselves as public intellectuals.

In situating these women within the emerging African-American urban communities of the free North, Doers of the Word provides an important counterweight to the vast scholarship on Southern slavery and argues that black "Civil Rights movements" cannot be seen as a purely modern phenomenon.

In particular, the book examines the ways in which this Northern black population, despite its heterogeneity, came together and established social organizations that would facilitate community empowerment; yet Peterson's analysis also acknowledges, and seeks to explain, the highly complex relationship of black women to these institutions, a relationship that rendered their stance as public intellectuals all the more bold and defiant.

Peterson begins her study in the 1830s, when a substantial body of oratory and writing by black women first emerged, and traces the development of this writing through the shifting political climate up to the end of Reconstruction. She builds her analyses upon Foucault's interdisciplinary model of discourse with an explicitly feminist approach, drawing upon sermons, spiritual autobiographies, travel and slave narratives, journalism, essays, poetry, speeches, and fiction.

From these, Peterson is able to answer several key questions. First, what empowered these women to act, to speak out, and to write? Why, and in what ways, were they marginalized within both the African-American and larger American communities? Where did they act, speak, and write from? How did they negotiate the power relations of sexism and racism in their work? And, lastly, how might one distinguish between their social action and its literary representation?

In seeking to answer these questions, Peterson herself may be seen as a "doer of the word," carrying forward the legacy of these nineteenth-century black women activists.

Publish Date
Language
English
Pages
284

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Previews available in: English

Edition Availability
Cover of: "Doers of the word"
"Doers of the word": African-American women speakers and writers in the North (1830-1880)
1998, Rutgers University Press
in English
Cover of: Doers of the word
Doers of the word: African-American women speakers and writers in the North (1830-1880)
1995, Oxford University Press
in English

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Book Details


Edition Notes

Includes bibliographical references (p. 259-271) and index.

Published in
New York
Series
Race and American culture

Classifications

Dewey Decimal Class
810.9/9287/08996073
Library of Congress
PS153.N5 P443 1995, PS153.N5P443 1995

The Physical Object

Pagination
ix, 284 p. :
Number of pages
284

ID Numbers

Open Library
OL1093284M
Internet Archive
doersofwordafric0000pete
ISBN 10
0195085191
LCCN
94017670
OCLC/WorldCat
30518589
Goodreads
5164173

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July 16, 2024 Edited by MARC Bot import existing book
August 30, 2020 Edited by ImportBot import existing book
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