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Contents
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Contents Acknowledgments ix Introduction: Going Public: African American Feminism in the Era of Reform xiii Chapter 1. Soul Winners and Sanctified Sisters: Nineteenth-Century African American Preaching Women 1 Chapter 2. Internationalizing Black Feminisms: Ellen Craft, Sarah Parker Remond, and American Slavery in the British Isles and Ireland 49 Chapter 3. “I don’t know how you will feel when I get through”: Racial Difference, Symbolic Value, and Sojourner Truth 93 Chapter 4. The Platform, the Pamphlet, and the Press: Ida B. Wells’s Pedagogy of American Lynching 131 Chapter 5. “We must be up and doing”: Feminist Black Nationalism in the Press 167 Conclusion: Feminist Affiliations in a Divisive Climate: Anna Julia Cooper’s “Woman versus the Indian” 225 Notes 249 Works Cited 295 Index 319 Illustrations Following Page 123 Jarena Lee (1783–?) Amanda Berry Smith (1837–1915) Sarah Parker Remond (1826–1892) Sojourner Truth (ca. 1797–1883) Ida B. Wells (1862–1931) Mary Church Terrell (1863–1954) Mary Ann Shadd Cary (1823–1893) Victoria Earle Mathews (1861–1907) Fannie Barrier Williams (1855–1944) Josephine Silone Yates (1859–1912) Frances Harper (1825–1911) Anna Julia Cooper (1858–1964) ...