Sarah and Angelina Grimke—the Grimke sisters—are revered
figures in American history, famous for rejecting their privileged
lives on a plantation in South Carolina to become firebrand
activists in the North. Their antislavery pamphlets, among the most
influential of the antebellum era, are still read today. Yet
retellings of their epic story have long obscured their Black
relatives. In The Grimkes, award-winning historian Kerri Greenidge
presents a parallel narrative, indeed a long-overdue corrective,
shifting the focus from the white abolitionist sisters to the Black
Grimkes and deepening our understanding of the long struggle for
racial and gender equality. That the Grimke sisters had Black
relatives in the first place was a consequence of slavery’s most
horrific reality. Sarah and Angelina’s older brother, Henry, was
notoriously violent and sadistic, and one of the women he owned,
Nancy Weston, bore him three sons: Archibald, Francis, and John.
While Greenidge follows the brothers’ trials and exploits in the
North, where Archibald and Francis became prominent members of the
post–Civil War Black elite, her narrative centers on the Black
women of the family, from Weston to Francis’s wife, the brilliant
intellectual and reformer Charlotte Forten, to Archibald’s
daughter, Angelina Weld Grimke, who channeled the family’s past
into pathbreaking modernist literature during the Harlem
Renaissance. In a grand saga that spans the eighteenth century to
the twentieth and stretches from Charleston to Philadelphia,
Boston, and beyond, Greenidge reclaims the Black Grimkes as
complex, often conflicted individuals shadowed by their origins.
Most strikingly, she indicts the white Grimke sisters for their
racial paternalism. They could envision the end of slavery, but
they could not imagine Black equality: when their Black nephews did
not adhere to the image of the kneeling and eternally grateful
slave, they were cruel and relentlessly judgmental—an emblem of
the limits of progressive white racial politics. A landmark
biography of the most important multiracial American family of the
nineteenth century, The Grimkes suggests that just as the Hemingses
and Jeffersons personified the racial myths of the founding
generation, the Grimkes embodied the legacy—both traumatic and
generative—of those myths, which reverberate to this day.
General
Imprint: |
W W Norton & Co Inc
|
Country of origin: |
United States |
Release date: |
February 2024 |
Authors: |
Kerri K Greenidge
|
Dimensions: |
210 x 140mm (L x W) |
Pages: |
432 |
ISBN-13: |
978-1-324-09454-8 |
Categories: |
Books
|
LSN: |
1-324-09454-0 |
Barcode: |
9781324094548 |
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