Free Black woman, poet, novelist, essayist, speaker, and activist, Frances Watkins Harper was one of the nineteenth century’s most important advocates of Abolitionism and female suffrage, and her pioneering work still has profound lessons for us today.
In this new book, Utz McKnight shows how Harper’s life and work inspired her contemporaries to imagine a better America. He seeks to recover her importance by examining not only her vision of the possibilities of Emancipation, but also her subsequent role in challenging Jim Crow. He argues that engaging with her ideas and writings is vital in understanding not only our historical inheritance, but also contemporary issues ranging from racial violence to the role of Christianity.
This lucid book is essential reading not only for students of African American history, but also for all progressives interested in issues of race, politics, and society.Table of Contents
PrefaceChapter One Frances Harper�s Poetic Journey
Chapter Two Iola Leroy: Social Equality
Chapter Three Trial and Triumph: The Public Demand for Equality
Chapter Four Sowing and Reaping: Personal Solutions and Conviction
Chapter Five Minnie�s Sacrifice and the Poetic License
Chapter Six Conclusion: Of Poems and Politics
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