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From Slave Cabins to the White House Homemade Citizenship in African American Culture

Title
From Slave Cabins to the White House Homemade Citizenship in African American Culture / Koritha Mitchell.
ISBN
025205220X
9780252052200
0252043324
9780252043321
Publication
Urbana : University of Illinois Press, [2020]
Manufacture
Baltimore, Md. : Project MUSE, 2020
Copyright Notice Date
©[2020]
Physical Description
1 online resource
Local Notes
Access is available to the Yale community.
Notes
Description based on print version record.
Access and use
Access restricted by licensing agreement.
Summary
"Most Americans would agree that devoted wives and mothers make families strong and that strong families are the bedrock of society. Yet, throughout this nation's history, black women have managed to become model mothers and wives, but their doing so has not kept them from being mistaken for "welfare queens" and "baby mamas," the stereotypes that most consistently shape U.S. public policy. In this book, Koritha Mitchell shows the evolving connections between black women's homemaking and citizenship from domesticities of the slave cabin and to Michelle Obama in the White House. Drawing on canonical texts by and about African American women, Mitchell begins by connecting the roles of black women as rape survivor, race mother, single lady, matriarch, the strong black woman, and the evolving black women to the various roles that the site of the home served in the eras of post-emancipation, the New Negro, Civil Rights, post-civil rights, and the "post-racial." By looking at key protagonists in literary texts by authors like Frances Harper, Zora Neale Hurston, Lorraine Hansberry, Octavia Butler, and Alice Walker, Mitchell exposes us to the palpable tension that emerges when African Americans, especially women, continue to invest in traditional domesticity even while seeing the signs that it will not yield for them the respectability and safety it should--black women might become decent housekeepers, but never homemakers. All in all, the confluence of these domestic locations and scripts shows that at every juncture, the home was a site where African American women and families negotiated and reasserted their citizenship in a society and culture that consistently and persistently continues to marginalize and assert violence against African Americans, regardless of how they met standards of respectability and citizenry"-- Provided by publisher.
Variant and related titles
Project MUSE - 2020 American Studies
Project MUSE - 2020 Complete
Project MUSE - 2020 Literature
Other formats
Print version: Mitchell, Koritha. From slave cabins to the White House Urbana : University of Illinois Press, [2020]
Format
Books / Online
Language
English
Added to Catalog
September 21, 2020
Series
UPCC book collections on Project MUSE.
The new black studies series
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Contents
House Slaves, Housekeepers, Homemakers
A Home of One's Own
No, Really: A Home of One's Own
New Negroes, New Homes
Home as Human Right and Black Power
Still the Master's House?
The Ultimate Home: Michelle Obama in the White House
From Mom-in-Chief to Predator-in-Chief.
Also listed under
Project Muse. distributor
Citation

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