Words of Witness: Black Women's Autobiography in the Post-Brown Era

Words of Witness: Black Women's Autobiography in the Post-Brown Era

by Angela A. Ards
Words of Witness: Black Women's Autobiography in the Post-Brown Era

Words of Witness: Black Women's Autobiography in the Post-Brown Era

by Angela A. Ards

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Overview


A literary and political genealogy of the last half-century, Words of Witness explores black feminist autobiographical narratives in the context of activism and history since the landmark 1954 segregation case, Brown v. Board of Education. Angela A. Ards examines how activist writers, especially five whose memoirs were published in the 1990s and 2000s, crafted these life stories to engage and shape progressive, post-Brown politics.
            Exploring works by the critically acclaimed June Jordan and Edwidge Danticat, as well as by popular and emerging authors such as Melba Beals, Rosemary Bray, and Eisa Davis, Ards demonstrates how each text asserts countermemories to official—and often nostalgic—understandings of the civil rights and Black Power movements. She situates each writer as activist-citizen, adopting and remaking particular roles—warrior, “the least of these,” immigrant, hip-hop head—to crystallize a range of black feminist responses to urgent but unresolved political issues.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780299305031
Publisher: University of Wisconsin Press
Publication date: 01/12/2016
Series: Wisconsin Studies in Autobiography
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 240
File size: 488 KB

About the Author


Angela A. Ards is an assistant professor of English at Southern Methodist University. She formerly worked as a journalist for Ms. and the Village Voice.

Table of Contents


Acknowledgments                 
 
Introduction: Post-Brown Political Aesthetics                      
1 Beyond the Strong Black Woman in Melba Beals’s Warriors Don’t Cry             
2 Reclaiming the Radicalism of Social Interdependence in Rosemary Bray’s Unafraid of the Dark: A Memoir                  
3 Honoring the Past to Move Forward in June Jordan’s Soldier: A Poet’s Childhood                     
4 Collective Storytelling as Diasporic Consciousness in Edwidge Danticat’s Brother, I’m Dying               
5 Cultivating Liberatory Joy in Eisa Davis’s Angela’s Mixtape                    
Epilogue: Teaching “the People”: Bodies, Material Histories, and the Project of Black Feminist Autobiography              
 
Notes             
Bibliography              
Index   
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