My Soul is My Own: Oral Narratives of African American Women in the ProfessionsRoutledge, 1993 - 213 pages Presents the lives of early 20th-century African-American women in a unique context - their own words. The women themselves are as extraordinary as the language they use to describe their experiences, at home, university and work. |
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Page 122
... antislavery argu- ment . However , it might have fulfilled a kind of voyeurism that one may experience when writing about someone else's life , or it could have been a somewhat covert means of expressing sexism and racism that ...
... antislavery argu- ment . However , it might have fulfilled a kind of voyeurism that one may experience when writing about someone else's life , or it could have been a somewhat covert means of expressing sexism and racism that ...
Page 123
... antislavery argument , the redundancy of certain types of questions ( i.e. , physical features , moral behavior , sensuality ) insinuate a belaboring of ideas to the point of fixation resembling eroticism . So it is likely that various ...
... antislavery argument , the redundancy of certain types of questions ( i.e. , physical features , moral behavior , sensuality ) insinuate a belaboring of ideas to the point of fixation resembling eroticism . So it is likely that various ...
Table des matières
Nine Narratives | 3 |
African | 65 |
Climbing the Ladder of Success from the | 87 |
Droits d'auteur | |
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Autres éditions - Tout afficher
My Soul is My Own: Oral Narratives of African American Women in the Professions Gwendolyn Etter-Lewis Aucun aperçu disponible - 1993 |
My Soul is My Own: Oral Narratives of African American Women in the Professions Gwendolyn Etter-Lewis Aucun aperçu disponible - 1993 |
Expressions et termes fréquents
activities African American students African American women asked autobiography black women brother called campus career club collaborative course culture discrimination Dust Tracks early Elmira embedding example experience father felt finished high school friends gender girl gonna grade graduated grandfather grandmother guess happened Harriet Harriet Jacobs Harriet Wilson Henry Louis Gates Hurston's important interesting interview kind knew language law school lives Louisa male married Mattison mean mother narrator Nellie McKay never oral narrative parents Pauli Murray pause Phi Beta Kappa position question race racism redneck remember reported speech Schomburg Library segment sexism sister slave narratives slavery social Spanish speak story talk taught teacher teaching tell things thought tion told took town tradition trying woman words writing written Yeah York young Zora