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Freedom's Women: Black Women and Families in Civil War Era Mississippi (Blacks in the Diaspora)
 
 
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Freedom's Women: Black Women and Families in Civil War Era Mississippi (Blacks in the Diaspora) [Hardcover]

Noralee Frankel (Author), Noralee Frankel (Author)

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Book Description

Blacks in the Diaspora October 30, 1999

"Frankel's scholarship in this carefully researched and clearly written study is impressive.... The study is thoroughly documented with 70 pages of footnotes and a 14-page bibliography, refleccting Frankel's grasp of the secondary literature as well as extensive work in primary documents." —Choice

Freedom's Women examines African American women's experiences during the Civil War and early Reconstruction years in Mississippi. Exploring issues of family and work, the author shows how African American women's attempts to achieve more control over their lives shaped their attitudes toward work, marriage, family, and community.


Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this book with Closer to Freedom: Enslaved Women and Everyday Resistance in the Plantation South (Gender and American Culture) $14.80

Freedom's Women: Black Women and Families in Civil War Era Mississippi (Blacks in the Diaspora) + Closer to Freedom: Enslaved Women and Everyday Resistance in the Plantation South (Gender and American Culture)


Editorial Reviews

Review

"Frankel's scholarship in this carefully researched and clearly written study is impressive. Her examination of Civil War widows' pension records and other primary sources reveals a great deal about the importance of Mississippi slave families and how emancipation strengthened them. Although women gained fewer legal rights than men from Reconstruction, they obtained much that had been denied them during slavery. They shared family authority and economic responsibility so much that Frankel concludes the free African American family was neither patriarchal nor matriarchal, but combinations of both. Freedwomen did not rely solely on legal definitions of marriage but developed codes of morality based on community standards. Their community tolerated intimate relationships outside of legal marriages and recognized terminations of relationships without legal divorce. Extended kin were considered members of the family, and family responsibilities included support of orphans, unmarried pregnant daughters, and handicapped children. The study is thoroughly documented with 70 pages of footnotes and a 14-page bibliography, reflecting Frankel's grasp of the secondary literature as well as extensive work in primary documents. Upper-division undergraduates and above. —R. Detweiler, California Polytechnic State Universit" ——R. Detweiler, California Polytechnic State University San Luis, Choice, June 2000

(—R. Detweiler, California Polytechnic State University San Luis Choice 2000)

About the Author

Dr. Noralee Frankel is assistant director on women, minorities, and teaching at the American Historical Association. She is author of Break Those Chains at Last: African Americans 1860-1880 and coeditor of Gender, Class, Race and Reform in the Progressive Era.


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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
On a Fourth of July several years before the Civil War, Charles Clark's slaves celebrated their day's respite from cotton cultivation by attending the slave wedding of fellow slaves Lucy Young and Thomas Brown. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
pension file, one freedwoman, subassistant commissioner, former slave men, pension examiner, cohabitational relationships, legalized marriage, leased plantations, freed labor, one freedman, former slave women, contraband camps, insurrectionary states, white interference, slave marriages, plantation book, pension records, white southern men, former slave owners, one former slave, slave couples
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
African American, Freedmen's Bureau, Lucy Brown, Civil War, Samuel Thomas, Black Codes, John Eaton, Thomas Brown, Benjamin Lee, United States Colored Troops, Charles Clark, Mississippi Valley, Civil Rights Act, Mary Johnson, Reuben Kelly, War Department, Alvan Gillem, Davis Bend, Robert Owens, Talbert Royal, Treasury Department, William Minor, Young's Point, Charles Hutchins, James Allen
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