The following article originally appeared in The History Teacher 13 (February 1980) and is reprinted here be permission. During the latter part of the 1970s, students of American history have recognized that black women\u27s unique history cannot be thoroughly analyzed within the confines of either black history or women\u27s history. Unfortunately, a gap exists between the realization of the goal to correct the problem and the publication of secondary works on black women\u27s history. To date, only one anthology containing original essays treats black women\u27s experiences from an historical perspective: Sharon Harley and Rosalyn Terborg-Penn (eds.), The AfroAmerican Woman: Struggles and Images (Port Washington, N.Y.: Kennikat Press, 197...
The African American Civil Rights Movement is a series of intentional occurrences in America that pr...
The most prominent images of Black women in antebellum America depicted in classes across the United...
Fascinating as black women are, there are as many unexplored questions about black women\u27s lives...
The following article originally appeared in The History Teacher 13 (February 1980) and is reprinted...
Afro-American women historians have paid little heed to the issues raised by Black feminists, and Bl...
The following is part of a bibliographical essay which will appear in Black Women\u27s Studies, to b...
In Fall 1979, I began teaching a course on Black Women in American History at the Open High School i...
This essay, on constructing historical knowledge about African Canadian women, p...
In the first half of this essay (Fall 1976, Vol. IV, No. 4) the author described the Wayne County Co...
The goal in this work is to provide a brief overview of the development of Black women‟s education t...
In this Independent Study, I examine Harriet Jacobs’s slave narrative, Incidents in the Life of a Sl...
The overall goal of this piece was to compose an essay conveying how different historiographers have...
In 1986, sociologist Patricia Hill Collins published the groundbreaking essay, “Learning from the Ou...
Despite the current interest in Black Girl Magic this essay argues that what Black women have acco...
Black women have made huge contributions to American society in movements, politics, and maintenance...
The African American Civil Rights Movement is a series of intentional occurrences in America that pr...
The most prominent images of Black women in antebellum America depicted in classes across the United...
Fascinating as black women are, there are as many unexplored questions about black women\u27s lives...
The following article originally appeared in The History Teacher 13 (February 1980) and is reprinted...
Afro-American women historians have paid little heed to the issues raised by Black feminists, and Bl...
The following is part of a bibliographical essay which will appear in Black Women\u27s Studies, to b...
In Fall 1979, I began teaching a course on Black Women in American History at the Open High School i...
This essay, on constructing historical knowledge about African Canadian women, p...
In the first half of this essay (Fall 1976, Vol. IV, No. 4) the author described the Wayne County Co...
The goal in this work is to provide a brief overview of the development of Black women‟s education t...
In this Independent Study, I examine Harriet Jacobs’s slave narrative, Incidents in the Life of a Sl...
The overall goal of this piece was to compose an essay conveying how different historiographers have...
In 1986, sociologist Patricia Hill Collins published the groundbreaking essay, “Learning from the Ou...
Despite the current interest in Black Girl Magic this essay argues that what Black women have acco...
Black women have made huge contributions to American society in movements, politics, and maintenance...
The African American Civil Rights Movement is a series of intentional occurrences in America that pr...
The most prominent images of Black women in antebellum America depicted in classes across the United...
Fascinating as black women are, there are as many unexplored questions about black women\u27s lives...