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Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary Book

Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary
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, <i>speaking</i> and <i>writing</i> women, black and white, rich and poor, old and young, in this unique anthology wh, Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary has a rating of 4.5 stars
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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
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  • Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary
  • Written by author Mary Louise Weaks
  • Published by University Press of Florida, July 1996
  • "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
  • A problematic relationship forms the core of this anthology--the interwoven lives of southern women.  On the one hand, they are linked by gender; on the other, they are divided by racism, class conflict, and sexual politics.  As suggested by the
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Preface
1From The Letterbook of Eliza Lucas Pinckney, 1739-176214
2From Letters of Eliza Wilkinson, During the Invasion and Possession of Charlestown, S.C., by the British in the Revolutionary War22
3From Letters from Alabama, 1817-182232
4"Mary Anna Gibbes, the Young Heroine of Stono, S.C."42
5From Journal of a Residence on a Georgian Plantation in 1838-1839 "Women in Slavery"48
6"A Marriage of Persuasion"55
7From Letters on the Equality of the Sexes and the Condition of Woman, Addressed to Mary S. Parker, President of the Boston Female Anti-Slavery Society62
8"Bible Defence of Slavery"
"An Appeal to My Countrywomen"
"Ethiopia"
"Bury Me in a Free Land"70
9From Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl
"Childhood"
"The New Master and Mistress"
"The Lover"76
10From Mary Chesnut's Civil War "Nation in the Making"98
11From Macaria; or, Altars of Sacrifice (Chapter 30)115
12From Beechenbrook; A Rhyme of the War125
13From 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
20From 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 Bibliography391
Credits409
Index411


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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, <i>speaking</i> and <i>writing</i> women, black and white, rich and poor, old and young, in this unique anthology wh, Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary

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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, <i>speaking</i> and <i>writing</i> women, black and white, rich and poor, old and young, in this unique anthology wh, Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary

Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary

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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, <i>speaking</i> and <i>writing</i> women, black and white, rich and poor, old and young, in this unique anthology wh, Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary

Southern Women's Writing: Colonial to Contemporary

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