Women were leading actors in twentieth-century developments in
Georgia, yet most histories minimize their contributions. The
essays in the second volume of "Georgia Women," edited by Ann Short
Chirhart and Kathleen Ann Clark, vividly portray a wide array of
Georgia women who played an important role in the state's history,
from little-known Progressive Era activists to famous present-day
figures such as Pulitzer Prize-winning author Alice Walker and
former First Lady Rosalynn Carter.
Georgia women were instrumental to state and national politics
even before they achieved suffrage, and as essays on Lillian Smith,
Frances Pauley, Coretta Scott King, and others demonstrate, they
played a key role in twentieth-century struggles over civil rights,
gender equality, and the proper size and reach of government.
Georgia women's contributions have been wide ranging in the arena
of arts and culture and include the works of renowned blues singer
Gertrude "Ma" Rainey and such nationally prominent literary figures
as Margaret Mitchell, Carson McCullers, and Flannery O'Connor, as
well as Walker.
While many of the volume's essays take a fresh look at
relatively well-known figures, readers will also have the
opportunity to discover women who were vital to Georgia's history
yet remain relatively obscure today, such as Atlanta educator and
activist Lugenia Burns Hope, World War II aviator Hazel Raines,
entrepreneur and carpet manufacturer Catherine Evans Whitener, and
rural activist and author Vara A. Majette. Collectively, the life
stories portrayed in this volume deepen our understanding of the
multifaceted history of not only Georgia women but also the state
itself.
Published with the generous support of the Honorable Dr. M.
Louise McBee
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