The Voice of Anna Julia Cooper
Including A Voice From the South and Other Important Essays, Papers, and Letters
Herausgeber: Bhan, Esme; Lemert, Charles
The Voice of Anna Julia Cooper
Including A Voice From the South and Other Important Essays, Papers, and Letters
Herausgeber: Bhan, Esme; Lemert, Charles
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This collection is a major contribution to the reconstruction of gender balance in African-American history -Manning Marable, Columbia University
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This collection is a major contribution to the reconstruction of gender balance in African-American history -Manning Marable, Columbia University
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Legacies of Social Thought Series
- Verlag: Globe Pequot Publishing Group Inc/Bloomsbury
- Seitenzahl: 370
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Januar 1998
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 600g
- ISBN-13: 9780847684083
- ISBN-10: 0847684083
- Artikelnr.: 21469908
- Legacies of Social Thought Series
- Verlag: Globe Pequot Publishing Group Inc/Bloomsbury
- Seitenzahl: 370
- Erscheinungstermin: 1. Januar 1998
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 229mm x 152mm x 22mm
- Gewicht: 600g
- ISBN-13: 9780847684083
- ISBN-10: 0847684083
- Artikelnr.: 21469908
Edited by Charles Lemert and Esme Bhan
Chapter 1 Anna Julia Cooper: The Colored Woman's Office Part 2 I. The
Colored Woman's Office: A Voice from the South Chapter 3 Our Raison d'Etre
(1892) Chapter 4 Womanhood: A Vital Element in the Regeneration and
Progress of a Race (1886) Chapter 5 The Higher Education of Women
(1890-1891) Chapter 6 "Woman versus the Indian" (1891-1892) Chapter 7 The
Status of Woman in America (1892) Part 8 II. Race and Culture: A Voice from
the South Chapter 9 Has America a Race Problem? If So, How Can It Best Be
Solved? (1892) Chapter 10 The Negro As Presented in American Literature
(1892) Chapter 11 What Are We Worth? (1892) Chapter 12 The Gain from a
Belief (1892) Part 13 III. The Range of Cooper's Voice: Feminism, Social
Service, Education, and Race Politics Chapter 14 The Intellectual Progress
of the Colored Women in the United States since the Emancipation
Proclamation: A Response to Fannie Barrier Williams (1893) Chapter 15 The
Ethics of the Negro Question (1902) Chapter 16 The Social Settlement: What
It Is, and What It Does (1913) Chapter 17 Sketches from a Teacher's
Notebook: Loss of Speech through Isolation (1923?) Chapter 18 Foreword to
Le Pelerinage de Charlemagne (1925) Chapter 19 The Humor of Teaching (1930)
Chapter 20 My Racial Philosophy (1930) Chapter 21 The Negro's Dialect
(1930s?) Chapter 22 On Education (1930s?) Angry Saxons and Negro Education
(1938) Chapter 23 Hitler and the Negro (1942?) Part 24 IV. World Politics,
Race, and Slavery: The Historical Studies Chapter 25 The Social Conditions
of the French-American Colonies: The Class Structure (1925) Chapter 26
Black Slavery and the French Nation (1925) Chapter 27 Equality of Races and
the Democratic Movement (1925) Chapter 28 Legislative Measures Concerning
Slavery in the United States: 1787-1850 (1925) Part 29 V. Reflections on
Her Life: Memoirs, Occasional Writings, Letters: 1925-1958 Chapter 30 The
Early Years in Washington: Reminiscences of Life with the Grimkes (1951)
Chapter 31 The Third Step: Cooper's Memoir of the Sorbonne Doctorate
(1945-1950?) Chapter 32 Selected Letters and Other Writings (1925-1958)
Chapter 33 The Life of Anna Julia Cooper: A Chronology Chapter 34 Index
Colored Woman's Office: A Voice from the South Chapter 3 Our Raison d'Etre
(1892) Chapter 4 Womanhood: A Vital Element in the Regeneration and
Progress of a Race (1886) Chapter 5 The Higher Education of Women
(1890-1891) Chapter 6 "Woman versus the Indian" (1891-1892) Chapter 7 The
Status of Woman in America (1892) Part 8 II. Race and Culture: A Voice from
the South Chapter 9 Has America a Race Problem? If So, How Can It Best Be
Solved? (1892) Chapter 10 The Negro As Presented in American Literature
(1892) Chapter 11 What Are We Worth? (1892) Chapter 12 The Gain from a
Belief (1892) Part 13 III. The Range of Cooper's Voice: Feminism, Social
Service, Education, and Race Politics Chapter 14 The Intellectual Progress
of the Colored Women in the United States since the Emancipation
Proclamation: A Response to Fannie Barrier Williams (1893) Chapter 15 The
Ethics of the Negro Question (1902) Chapter 16 The Social Settlement: What
It Is, and What It Does (1913) Chapter 17 Sketches from a Teacher's
Notebook: Loss of Speech through Isolation (1923?) Chapter 18 Foreword to
Le Pelerinage de Charlemagne (1925) Chapter 19 The Humor of Teaching (1930)
Chapter 20 My Racial Philosophy (1930) Chapter 21 The Negro's Dialect
(1930s?) Chapter 22 On Education (1930s?) Angry Saxons and Negro Education
(1938) Chapter 23 Hitler and the Negro (1942?) Part 24 IV. World Politics,
Race, and Slavery: The Historical Studies Chapter 25 The Social Conditions
of the French-American Colonies: The Class Structure (1925) Chapter 26
Black Slavery and the French Nation (1925) Chapter 27 Equality of Races and
the Democratic Movement (1925) Chapter 28 Legislative Measures Concerning
Slavery in the United States: 1787-1850 (1925) Part 29 V. Reflections on
Her Life: Memoirs, Occasional Writings, Letters: 1925-1958 Chapter 30 The
Early Years in Washington: Reminiscences of Life with the Grimkes (1951)
Chapter 31 The Third Step: Cooper's Memoir of the Sorbonne Doctorate
(1945-1950?) Chapter 32 Selected Letters and Other Writings (1925-1958)
Chapter 33 The Life of Anna Julia Cooper: A Chronology Chapter 34 Index
Chapter 1 Anna Julia Cooper: The Colored Woman's Office Part 2 I. The
Colored Woman's Office: A Voice from the South Chapter 3 Our Raison d'Etre
(1892) Chapter 4 Womanhood: A Vital Element in the Regeneration and
Progress of a Race (1886) Chapter 5 The Higher Education of Women
(1890-1891) Chapter 6 "Woman versus the Indian" (1891-1892) Chapter 7 The
Status of Woman in America (1892) Part 8 II. Race and Culture: A Voice from
the South Chapter 9 Has America a Race Problem? If So, How Can It Best Be
Solved? (1892) Chapter 10 The Negro As Presented in American Literature
(1892) Chapter 11 What Are We Worth? (1892) Chapter 12 The Gain from a
Belief (1892) Part 13 III. The Range of Cooper's Voice: Feminism, Social
Service, Education, and Race Politics Chapter 14 The Intellectual Progress
of the Colored Women in the United States since the Emancipation
Proclamation: A Response to Fannie Barrier Williams (1893) Chapter 15 The
Ethics of the Negro Question (1902) Chapter 16 The Social Settlement: What
It Is, and What It Does (1913) Chapter 17 Sketches from a Teacher's
Notebook: Loss of Speech through Isolation (1923?) Chapter 18 Foreword to
Le Pelerinage de Charlemagne (1925) Chapter 19 The Humor of Teaching (1930)
Chapter 20 My Racial Philosophy (1930) Chapter 21 The Negro's Dialect
(1930s?) Chapter 22 On Education (1930s?) Angry Saxons and Negro Education
(1938) Chapter 23 Hitler and the Negro (1942?) Part 24 IV. World Politics,
Race, and Slavery: The Historical Studies Chapter 25 The Social Conditions
of the French-American Colonies: The Class Structure (1925) Chapter 26
Black Slavery and the French Nation (1925) Chapter 27 Equality of Races and
the Democratic Movement (1925) Chapter 28 Legislative Measures Concerning
Slavery in the United States: 1787-1850 (1925) Part 29 V. Reflections on
Her Life: Memoirs, Occasional Writings, Letters: 1925-1958 Chapter 30 The
Early Years in Washington: Reminiscences of Life with the Grimkes (1951)
Chapter 31 The Third Step: Cooper's Memoir of the Sorbonne Doctorate
(1945-1950?) Chapter 32 Selected Letters and Other Writings (1925-1958)
Chapter 33 The Life of Anna Julia Cooper: A Chronology Chapter 34 Index
Colored Woman's Office: A Voice from the South Chapter 3 Our Raison d'Etre
(1892) Chapter 4 Womanhood: A Vital Element in the Regeneration and
Progress of a Race (1886) Chapter 5 The Higher Education of Women
(1890-1891) Chapter 6 "Woman versus the Indian" (1891-1892) Chapter 7 The
Status of Woman in America (1892) Part 8 II. Race and Culture: A Voice from
the South Chapter 9 Has America a Race Problem? If So, How Can It Best Be
Solved? (1892) Chapter 10 The Negro As Presented in American Literature
(1892) Chapter 11 What Are We Worth? (1892) Chapter 12 The Gain from a
Belief (1892) Part 13 III. The Range of Cooper's Voice: Feminism, Social
Service, Education, and Race Politics Chapter 14 The Intellectual Progress
of the Colored Women in the United States since the Emancipation
Proclamation: A Response to Fannie Barrier Williams (1893) Chapter 15 The
Ethics of the Negro Question (1902) Chapter 16 The Social Settlement: What
It Is, and What It Does (1913) Chapter 17 Sketches from a Teacher's
Notebook: Loss of Speech through Isolation (1923?) Chapter 18 Foreword to
Le Pelerinage de Charlemagne (1925) Chapter 19 The Humor of Teaching (1930)
Chapter 20 My Racial Philosophy (1930) Chapter 21 The Negro's Dialect
(1930s?) Chapter 22 On Education (1930s?) Angry Saxons and Negro Education
(1938) Chapter 23 Hitler and the Negro (1942?) Part 24 IV. World Politics,
Race, and Slavery: The Historical Studies Chapter 25 The Social Conditions
of the French-American Colonies: The Class Structure (1925) Chapter 26
Black Slavery and the French Nation (1925) Chapter 27 Equality of Races and
the Democratic Movement (1925) Chapter 28 Legislative Measures Concerning
Slavery in the United States: 1787-1850 (1925) Part 29 V. Reflections on
Her Life: Memoirs, Occasional Writings, Letters: 1925-1958 Chapter 30 The
Early Years in Washington: Reminiscences of Life with the Grimkes (1951)
Chapter 31 The Third Step: Cooper's Memoir of the Sorbonne Doctorate
(1945-1950?) Chapter 32 Selected Letters and Other Writings (1925-1958)
Chapter 33 The Life of Anna Julia Cooper: A Chronology Chapter 34 Index