ABSTRACT

Courting Communities focuses on the writing and oratory of nineteenth-century African-American women whose racial uplift projects troubled the boundaries of race, nation and gender. In particular, it reexamines the politics of gender in nationalist movements and black women's creative response within and against both state and insurgent black nationalist discourses. Courting Communities highlights the ideas and rhetorical strategies of female activists considered to be less important than the prominent male nationalists. Yet their story is significant precisely because it does not fit into the pre-established categories of nationalism and leadership bequeathed to us from the past.

chapter |16 pages

Introduction

chapter |20 pages

Controversial Collectivities

Sojourner Truth's Search for Home

chapter |20 pages

Charting a Course for the Middle Class

Maria Stewart's Advice to the Middle Sector

chapter |19 pages

Bi-National Connections

Mary Ann Shadd Cary and the Afro-Canadian Community

chapter |24 pages

Tending to the Roots

Anna Julia Cooper on Social Labor and Harvest Reaping

chapter |19 pages

Inheriting Community

Or, Educating Iola

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion

Community as Continuum