Priya Kandaswamy brings together two crucial moments in welfare history-the advent of the Freedmen's Bureau during Reconstruction and the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996-to show how they each targeted Black women through negative stereotyping and normative assumptions about gender, race, and citizenship.
Priya Kandaswamy brings together two crucial moments in welfare history-the advent of the Freedmen's Bureau during Reconstruction and the Personal Responsibility and Work Opportunity Reconciliation Act of 1996-to show how they each targeted Black women through negative stereotyping and normative assumptions about gender, race, and citizenship.
Acknowledgments vii 1. Welfare Reform and the Afterlife of Slavery 1 2. Making State, Making Family 29 3. Marriage and the Making of Gendered Citizenship 59 4. Domestic Labor and the Politics of Reform 105 5. The Chains of Welfare 151 Conclusion 193 Notes 197 Bibliography 215 Index 227
Acknowledgments vii 1. Welfare Reform and the Afterlife of Slavery 1 2. Making State, Making Family 29 3. Marriage and the Making of Gendered Citizenship 59 4. Domestic Labor and the Politics of Reform 105 5. The Chains of Welfare 151 Conclusion 193 Notes 197 Bibliography 215 Index 227
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