Ain't I a Woman: Black Women and Feminism
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Read between June 9 - June 18, 2020
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books had offered me visions of new worlds different from the one that was most familiar to me.
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I was awed that books could offer a different standpoint, that words on the page could transform and change me, change my mind.
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I could not truly belong in the movement so long as I could not make my voice heard.
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Before I could demand that others listen to me I had to listen to myself, to discover my identity.
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Mating radical feminist politics with my urge to write,
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I decided early on that I wanted to create books that could be read and understood across different class boundaries.
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Mama, who was herself held captive by the bonds of patriarchy, encouraged us to break free.
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Even though mama has died, no day passes that I do not think of her and all the
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black women like her, who with no political movement supporting
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them, no theory of how to be feminist, provided practical blueprints for liberati...
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coming after them the gift of choice, freedom, wholeness of mi...
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It was the silence of the oppressed—that profound silence engendered by resignation and acceptance of one’s lot.
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Contemporary black women could not join together to fight for women’s rights because we did not see “womanhood” as an important aspect of our identity.
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Addressing the World Congress of Representative Women in 1893, Anna Cooper spoke on the status of black women:
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It requires the long and painful growth of generations.
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The white woman could at least plead for her own emancipation; the black women doubly enslaved, could but suffer and struggle and be silent.
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Mary Church Terrell, Sojourner Truth, Anna Cooper, Amanda Berry Smith
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Elizabeth Stanton
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“Women and Black Men,” published in the 1869 issue of the Revolution, attempted to show that the republican cry for “manhood suffrage”
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was aimed at creating antagonism between black men and all women, the break between the two ...
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While many black male political activists sympathized with the cause of women’s rights advocates, they were not willing to los...
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Black women were placed in a double bind; to support women’s suffrage would imply that th...
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with white women activists who had publicly revea...
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but to support only black male suffrage was to endorse a patriarchal social order that would gr...
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The more radical black women activists demanded that black men and all wo...
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Sojourner Truth was the most out-spoken black wom...
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She argued publicly in favor of women gaining the right to vote and emphasized that without this right black women would have...
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Her famous statement, “there is a great stir about colored men getting their rights, but not a w...
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and if colored men get their rights, and not colored women theirs...
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men will be masters over the women, and it will be just as ba...
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reminded the American public that sexist oppression was as real a threat to the freedom of black...
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Black activists defined freedom as gaining the right to participate as full citizens in American culture; they were not rejecting the value system of that culture.
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Toni Cade’s article “On the Issue of Roles”
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What had begun as a movement to free all black people from racist oppression became a movement with its primary goal the establishment of black male patriarchy.
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woman’s suffering however great could not take precedence over male pain.
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When feminists acknowledge in one breath that black women are victimized and in the same breath emphasize
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their strength, they imply that though black women are oppressed they manage
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to circumvent the damaging impact of oppression ...
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and that is simply not...
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Usually, when people talk about the “strength” of black women they are referring to the way in which they perceive bl...
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They ignore the reality that to be strong in the face of oppression is not the same as overcoming oppression, that endurance is no...
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No one bothered to discuss the way in which sexism operates both independently of and simultaneously with racism to oppress us.
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case in point is the following passage describing white female reactions to white male support of black male
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suffrage in the 19th century taken from William O’Neill’s book Everyone Was Brave:
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Their shocked disbelief that men would so humiliate them by supporting votes for Negroes but...
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the limits of their sympathy for black men, even as it drove these former...
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Barbara Berg, The Remembered Gate: Origins of American Feminism.
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In their fight for the vote, women both ignored and compromised the principles of feminism.
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The complexities of American society at the turn of the century induced the suffragists to change the basis of their demand for the franchise.
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The women Berg refers to are white women yet she n...
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