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Preface | ||
1 | From The Letterbook of Eliza Lucas Pinckney, 1739-1762 | 14 |
2 | From Letters of Eliza Wilkinson, During the Invasion and Possession of Charlestown, S.C., by the British in the Revolutionary War | 22 |
3 | From Letters from Alabama, 1817-1822 | 32 |
4 | "Mary Anna Gibbes, the Young Heroine of Stono, S.C." | 42 |
5 | From Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1838-1839 "Women in Slavery" | 48 |
6 | "A Marriage of Persuasion" | 55 |
7 | From Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition of Woman, Addressed to Mary S. Parker, President of the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society | 62 |
8 | "Bible Defence of Slavery" | |
"An Appeal to My Countrywomen" | ||
"Ethiopia" | ||
"Bury Me in a Free Land" | 70 | |
9 | From Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl | |
"Childhood" | ||
"The New Master and Mistress" | ||
"The Lover" | 76 | |
10 | From Mary Chesnut's Civil War "Nation in the Making" | 98 |
11 | From Macaria; or, Altars of Sacrifice (Chapter 30) | 115 |
12 | From Beechenbrook; A Rhyme of the War | 125 |
13 | From Behind the Scenes, or Thirty Years a Slave and Four Years in the White House (Chapter 7) | 132 |
14 | "Gran'mammy" | |
"Why Gran'mammy Didn't Like Pound-Cake" | 146 | |
15 | "The Dancin' Party at Harrison's Cove" | 153 |
16 | "The Little Convent Girl" | 169 |
17 | "A Respectable Woman" | 177 |
18 | "Over the River" | 182 |
19 | "Sonnet" | |
"April Is on the Way" | ||
"Cano - I Sing" | ||
"The Proletariat Speaks" | 194 | |
20 | From The Wave (Chapter 1) | 208 |
21 | "The Journey" | 215 |
22 | "The Petrified Woman" | 229 |
23 | "The Eatonville Anthology" | 242 |
24 | "The Haunted Boy" | 254 |
25 | "The Life You Save May Be Your Own" | 267 |
26 | "Livvie" | 279 |
27 | "For Malcolm X" | |
"Birmingham, 1963" | ||
"The African Village" | 300 | |
28 | "Beasts of the Southern Wild" | 304 |
29 | "We a BadddDDD People" | |
"Blk/Rhetoric" | ||
"From a Black Feminist Conference, Reflections on Margaret Walker: Poet" | ||
"A Letter to Dr. Martin Luther King" | 318 | |
30 | "The Black Writer and the Southern Experience" | 326 |
31 | "Shiloh" | 332 |
32 | "Southern Women Writing: Toward a Literature of Wholeness" | 346 |
33 | "The Expansion of the Universe" | 365 |
34 | "South of the Border" | 381 |
Selected Bibliography | 391 | |
Credits | 409 | |
Index | 411 |
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Add Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary, The southern lady, traditionally depicted as a bloodlessly marmoreal icon, is jostled off her pedestal by living, moving, and, above all, speaking and writing women, black and white, rich and poor, old and young, in this unique anthology wh, Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary to the inventory that you are selling on WonderClubX
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Add Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary, The southern lady, traditionally depicted as a bloodlessly marmoreal icon, is jostled off her pedestal by living, moving, and, above all, speaking and writing women, black and white, rich and poor, old and young, in this unique anthology wh, Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary to your collection on WonderClub |