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Authors: Beverly Guy-Sheftall

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Superfly
(film)
Survey Graphic
Sweet Honey in the Rock
T
Tanner, Benjamin
Tanner, Leslie
Tate, Claudia
Terborg-Penn, Rosalyn
Terrell, Mary Church
Terrelonge, Pauline
Their Eyes Were Watching God
(Hurston)
theology. See religion and churchwomen
Thiongo, Ngugi wa
Third World Women's Alliance
Thomas, Clarence
Tillery, Linda
Toure, Sekou
Townes, Emily
Trenton Six
Truth, Sojourner
Tubman, Harriet
U
Unbought and Unbossed
(Chisholm)
unions.
See
labor and economic
issues
Universal Negro Improvement Association (UNIA)
Urquiza, Consuelo
V
Vietnam War
Village Voice
violence against women
Voice from the South by a Black Woman of the South, A
(Cooper)
Voice of the Negro
Voices from Women's Liberation
(Tanner)
W
Wakefield, Rosa
Walker, Alice
Wallace, Maggie
Wallace, Michele
Ward, Samuel Ringgold
Ware, Caroline F.
Ware, Cellestine
Washington, Booker T.
Washington, Mary Helen
Washington
Eagle
Watkins, Mary
Weathers, Mary Ann
Weems, Renita
Wells-Barnett, Ida B.
Weltfish, Gene
West, Cornel
West, Dorothy
Westhoff, Charles F.
Wheatley, Phyllis
When and Where I Enter
(Giddings)
When Children Want Children
(Dash)
White, Deborah Gray
White, E. Frances
White, Evelyn C.
White, Nancy
White, Ryan
Wilberforce University
Williams, Delores
Williams, Fannie Barrier
Williams, Rose
womanism
Women, Race, and Class
(Davis)
Women in Africa and the African Diaspora
(Terborg-Penn et al.)
Women of Color Institute
Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU)
women's club movement
Women's Era
women's liberation movement.
See also
specific writers
Women's Trade Union League
Women Wage Earners Association
Woodson, Carter G.
Woolf, Virginia
Working Women's Association
Work of the Afro-American Woman, The
(Mossell)
World's Anti-Slavery Convention (1840)
Wright, Doris
Wright, Nathan
Y
Yanagisako, Sylvia
Z
Zami: A New Spelling of My Name
(Lorde)
a
Barbara Welter, “The Cult of True Womanhood,”
American Quarterly
18 (Summer 1966), 151.
b
Today, in the rural sections of the South, especially on the remnants of the old plantations, one finds households where old grandmothers rule their daughters, sons, and grand-children with a matriarchal authority.
c
Salpingectomy: Through an abdominal incision, the surgeon cuts both fallopian tubes and ties off the separated ends, after which act there is no way for the egg to pass from the ovary to the womb.
d
I would like to give particular acknowledgment to the Combahee River Collective's “A Black Feminist Statement.” Because this document espouses “struggling against racial, sexual, heterosexual, and class oppression,” it has become a manifesto of radical feminist thought, action, and practice.
e
One such example is the Port Royal Experiment (1862), the precursor of the Freedmen's Bureau. Port Royal was a program of relief for “freed men and women” in the South Carolina Sea Islands, organized under the auspices of the Boston Education Commission and the Freedmen's Relief Assoc. in New York and the Port Royal Relief Assoc. in Philadelphia, and sanctioned by the Union Army and the Federal Government. See
The Journal of Charolotte Forten
on the “Port Royal Experiment” (Boston: Beacon Press, 1969). Through her Northern bourgeois myopia, Forten recounts her experiences as a black teacher among the black freed men and women and her Northern white women peers.
f
From “Rape: A Radical Analysis, an African-American Perspective” by Kalamu ya Salaam in
Black Books Bulletin
, vol. 6, no. 4 (1980).
g
Seabury Press, New York, 1970.
h
The whole argument is painfully reminiscent of Eldridge Cleaver's misogynist assertion, twenty years ago, that rape is a political act, and Norman Mailer's contention that black men were more in touch with their sexuality than whites.
i
This is not to imply that all sexist cruelty among black people was inherited from white slave owners. On the contrary, in the sections of
The Color Purple
that are set in Africa there is an exploration of the historical oppression of women that is endemic to many traditional African cultures and that continues today.
j
The poems in this essay are from
Horses Make a Landscape Look More Beautiful
by Alice Walker (San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1984).
k
One shining example of criticism by a black man offered
with
love is the review of
The Color Purple,
the movie, by Carl Dix that appeared in the
Revolutionary Worker.
He expressed concern over the way so many of Celie's problems seemed to be solved by her receiving a house and business left to her by her father (who had been lynched when she was a child). He correctly argues that the inheritance of private property is not a viable solution in terms of the masses of poor people and wishes that this aspect of Celie's existence could have been more progressive. I understand this criticism and feel it does indeed project our thoughts forward into the realm of better solutions for the landless, jobless, and propertyless masses. However, I also feel that for Celie's time—the post-Reconstruction era in the South, whose hallmark was the dispossession of blacks—this solution was in fact progressive; it spoke eloquently of the foresight of her father in his attempt to provide for her in a society where black people's attempts to provide for their coming generations were brutally repressed.
© 1995 by Beverly Guy-Sheftall
 
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form without written permission
from the publisher.
Pages xxi through xxiv constitute an extension of this copyright page.
 
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number 95-69570
eISBN : 978-1-595-58765-7
 
Published in the United States by The New Press, New York
Distributed by W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., New York
 
Established in 1990 as a major alternative to the large, commercial publishing houses, The New Press is the first full-scale nonprofit American book publisher outside of the university presses. The Press is operated editorially in the public interest, rather than for private gain; it is committed to publishing in innovative ways works of educational, cultural, and community value that, despite their intellectual merits, might not normally be commercially viable. The New Press's editorial offices are located at the City University of New York.
 
 

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