336 pages, 6 x 9
Paperback
Release Date:24 Sep 2009
ISBN:9781616101114
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Lives Full of Struggle and Triumph

Southern Women, Their Institutions, and Their Communities

University Press of Florida, Orange Grove Texts Plus

"A splendid sampler of the very latest and best of scholarship in the field of southern women’s history."—Thomas Appleton, Eastern Kentucky University

<P>Spanning the sweep of southern women’s history from colonial times to the late 20th century, this collection represents the best scholarship on the lives and experiences of black and white southern women. Through topics as diverse as the rise of the United Daughters of the Confederacy and  the organization of labor in the apparel industry, these essays explore how southern women constantly moved beyond the traditional confines of race, class, and gender to resist the restrictions of a patriarchal society and assert themselves through organizations and institutions in their communities and personal lives.

<P>Contents<P>

Introduction, by Anne Firor Scott<br />

Part I. The Private World<br />

1. "The Empire of My Heart": The Marriage of William Byrd II and Lucy Parke Byrd, by Paula A. Treckel<br />

2. The New Andromeda: Sarah Morgan and the Post-Civil War Domestic Ideal, by Giselle Roberts<br />

3. "The Worst Results in Mississippi May Prove the Best for Us": Blanche Butler Ames and Reconstruction, by Warren Ellem<br />

4. "College Girls": The Female Academy and Female Identity in the Old South, by Anya Jabour<br />

Part II. The Civil War Era<br />

5. "'Tis True That Our Southern Ladies Have Done and Are Still Acting a Conspicuous Part in This War": Women on the Confederate Home Front in Edgefield County, South Carolina, by Orville Vernon Burton<br />

6.  Ministries in Black and White: The Catholic Nuns of St. Augustine, 1859-1869, by Barbara E. Mattick<br />

7. The Rise of the United Daughters of the Confederacy, 1894-1914, by Karen L. Cox<br />

Part III. The Segregation Era<br />

8. Keepers of the Hearth: Women, the Klan, and Traditional Family Values, by Glenn Feldman<br />

9. Warm Personal Friend, or Worse Than Hitler? How Southern Women Viewed Eleanor Roosevelt, 1933-1945, by Pamela Tyler<br />

Part IV. The Era of Social Change<br />

10. Esther Cooper Jackson: A Life in the Whirlwind, by Sarah Hart Brown<br />

11. From Sharecropper to Schoolteacher: Thelma McGee’s Mississippi Girlhood, by Kathi Kern<br />

12. "Bridges Burned to a Privileged Past": Anne Braden and the Southern Freedom Movement, by Catherine Fosl<br />

13. Vivion Brewer of Arkansas: A Ladylike Assault on the "Southern Way of Life," by Elizabeth Jacoway<br />

14. After the Wives Went to Work: Organizing Women in the Southern Apparel Industry, by Michelle Haberland<br />

<P>Bruce Clayton is Harry A. Logan Professor of History at Allegheny College, Meadville, Pennsylvania. He is the author of a biography of W. J. Cash and has co-authored a previous book with John Salmond, Debating Southern History: Ideas and Actions in the Twentieth Century South.<P>

John A. Salmond is professor of American history at La Trobe University, Melbourne, Australia. He is the author of Gastonia 1929: The Story of the Loray Mill Strike; “My Mind Set on Freedom”: A History of the Civil Rights Movement, 1954-1968; and The General Textile Strike of 1934: From Maine to Alabama (2002).

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