Mississippi Women
Their Histories, Their Lives, Volume 2
Title Details
Pages: 360
Illustrations: 16 b&w photos
Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in
Formats
Paperback
Pub Date: 02/01/2010
ISBN: 9-780-8203-3394-6
List Price: $34.95
Hardcover
Pub Date: 02/01/2010
ISBN: 9-780-8203-3393-9
List Price: $120.95
Related Subjects
HISTORY / United States / State & Local / South (AL, AR, FL, GA, KY, LA, MS, NC, SC, TN, VA, WV)
Mississippi Women
Their Histories, Their Lives, Volume 2
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- Description
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- Contributors
Volume 1 of Mississippi Women enriched our understanding of women’s roles in the state’s history through profiles of notable, though often neglected, individuals. Volume 2 explores the historical forces that have shaped women’s lives in Mississippi. Covering an expanse of time from early European settlement through the course of the twentieth century, the essays in the second volume acknowledge the state’s diverse cultural and physical landscapes as they discuss how issues of race, gender, and class affected women’s lives in various private and public spheres.
Essays on the state’s early history focus on such topics as Choctaw and Chickasaw women’s influence on Native American society and tribal councils, daily life for free black women in slaveholding Natchez, and the efforts of white Protestant women to establish churches on the frontier. Several essays cast new light on legal concerns, including two on the pivotal Married Women’s Property Act of 1839, while other essays examine the impact of the Civil War and Reconstruction on women’s lives.
The boundaries of race and gender in Jim Crow Mississippi are explored through an essay on the women of the mixed-race Knight family, notably the educator, nurse, and missionary Anna Knight. Women’s experiences with rural electrification, consumerism, civil rights activism, social and service clubs, and feminism are among the other twentieth-century topics addressed in the essays. Volume 2 concludes with an essay on storytelling and remembrance that centers on the family of Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist (and Mississippi native) William Raspberry.
—Journal of Southern History
—Elizabeth Hayes Turner, author of Women and Gender in the New South, 1865–1945
—Suzanne Marrs, author of Eudora Welty: A Biography
—Beverly Greene Bond, editor of Tennessee Women: Their Lives and Times
—Barbara Y. Phillips, Former Ford Foundation Program Officer for Women's Rights and Gender Equity
Michael B. Ballard
Nancy Bercaw
Joyce Linda Broussard
Victoria E. Bynum
James Taylor Carson
Karen L. Cox
Emilye Crosby
Susan Ditto
Brenda Eagles
Michael Landon
Kevin McCarthy
Sara E. Morris
J. Moye
Jennifer Nardone
Ted Ownby
Hattye Raspberry-Hall
Randy J. Sparks