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Disfigured Images - The Historical Assault on Afro-American Women (Hardcover, New)
Loot Price: R2,342
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Disfigured Images - The Historical Assault on Afro-American Women (Hardcover, New)
Series: Contributions in Afro-American and African Studies: Contemporary Black Poets
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"Much of the material unearthed by this book is ugly," states
historiographer Patricia Morton who exposes "profoundly
dehumanizing constructions of reality embedded in American
scholarship" as it has attempted to render the history of the
Afro-American woman. Focusing on the scholarly "literature of fact"
rather than on fictional or popular portrayals, Disfigured Images
explores the telling--and frequent mis-telling--of the story of
black women during a century of American historiography beginning
in the late nineteenth century and extending to the present. Morton
finds that during this period, a large body of scholarly literature
was generated that "presented little fact and much fiction" about
black women's history. The book's ten chapters take long and
lingering looks at the black woman's "prefabricated" past.
Contemporary revisionist studies with their goals of discovering
and articulating the real nature of the slave woman's experience
and role are thoroughly examined in the conclusion. Disfigured
Images complements current work by recognizing in its findings a
long-needed refutation of a caricatured, mythical version of black
women's history. Morton's introduction presents an overview of her
subject emphasizing the mythical, ingrained nature of the black
woman's image in historiography as a "natural and permanent slave."
The succeeding chapters use historical and social science works as
primary sources to explore such issues as the foundations of
sexism-racism, the writing of W.E.B. DuBois, twentieth century
notions of black women, current black and women's studies, new and
old images of motherhood, and more. The conclusion investigates how
and why recent Americanhistoriographical scholarship has banished
the old myths by presenting a more accurate history of black women.
This keenly perceptive and original study should find an
influential place in both women's studies and black studies
programs as well as in American history, American literature, and
sociology departments. With its unusually complete panorama of the
period covered it would be a unique and valuable addition to
courses such as slavery, the American South, women in (North)
American history, Afro-American history, race and sex in American
literature and discourse, and the sociology of race.
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