NOT SLAVES OF ANOTHER IMAGE: BLACK WOMANHOOD REIMAGED IN THE FICTION OF FRANCES E.W. HARPER AND SUTTON E. GRIGGS

In this thesis, I examine depictions of black female characters crafted by black authors writing in the late 19th century, and I consider how they use these depictions as attempts to challenge white supremacist rhetoric and imagery. In particular, I examine how Frances E.W. Harper and Sutton E. Grig...

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Main Author: Geiselman, Betsy
Format: Others
Published: OpenSIUC 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses/2728
https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3742&context=theses
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spelling ndltd-siu.edu-oai-opensiuc.lib.siu.edu-theses-37422020-10-09T05:13:55Z NOT SLAVES OF ANOTHER IMAGE: BLACK WOMANHOOD REIMAGED IN THE FICTION OF FRANCES E.W. HARPER AND SUTTON E. GRIGGS Geiselman, Betsy In this thesis, I examine depictions of black female characters crafted by black authors writing in the late 19th century, and I consider how they use these depictions as attempts to challenge white supremacist rhetoric and imagery. In particular, I examine how Frances E.W. Harper and Sutton E. Griggs represent black women through their female characters in their respective novels, Iola Leroy and Imperium in Imperio. I situate these novels within the historical moments, Reconstruction and Redemption, with which Harper and Griggs both document and contend. In these two texts, Harper and Griggs trace, through their characters’ struggles, the hopes and gains of Reconstruction, and the frustration and despair of Redemption. In attending so closely to their own political contexts, Harper and Griggs, non-traditional novelists who were more well known for other forms of writing and for their oratorical skills, selected the novel as a political tool to theorize uplift. Throughout this thesis I examine how and why their constructions of black womanhood in Iola Leroy and Imperium in Imperio frequently idealize their female characters, and I focus on both authors’ efforts to reclaim the image of black women, salvaging it from the destructive imagery of plantation literature and introducing a proud and positive model of black feminine virtue, strength, and influence. 2020-09-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses/2728 https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3742&context=theses Theses OpenSIUC black womanhood Frances Harper Imperium in Imperio Iola Leroy Sutton Griggs
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic black womanhood
Frances Harper
Imperium in Imperio
Iola Leroy
Sutton Griggs
spellingShingle black womanhood
Frances Harper
Imperium in Imperio
Iola Leroy
Sutton Griggs
Geiselman, Betsy
NOT SLAVES OF ANOTHER IMAGE: BLACK WOMANHOOD REIMAGED IN THE FICTION OF FRANCES E.W. HARPER AND SUTTON E. GRIGGS
description In this thesis, I examine depictions of black female characters crafted by black authors writing in the late 19th century, and I consider how they use these depictions as attempts to challenge white supremacist rhetoric and imagery. In particular, I examine how Frances E.W. Harper and Sutton E. Griggs represent black women through their female characters in their respective novels, Iola Leroy and Imperium in Imperio. I situate these novels within the historical moments, Reconstruction and Redemption, with which Harper and Griggs both document and contend. In these two texts, Harper and Griggs trace, through their characters’ struggles, the hopes and gains of Reconstruction, and the frustration and despair of Redemption. In attending so closely to their own political contexts, Harper and Griggs, non-traditional novelists who were more well known for other forms of writing and for their oratorical skills, selected the novel as a political tool to theorize uplift. Throughout this thesis I examine how and why their constructions of black womanhood in Iola Leroy and Imperium in Imperio frequently idealize their female characters, and I focus on both authors’ efforts to reclaim the image of black women, salvaging it from the destructive imagery of plantation literature and introducing a proud and positive model of black feminine virtue, strength, and influence.
author Geiselman, Betsy
author_facet Geiselman, Betsy
author_sort Geiselman, Betsy
title NOT SLAVES OF ANOTHER IMAGE: BLACK WOMANHOOD REIMAGED IN THE FICTION OF FRANCES E.W. HARPER AND SUTTON E. GRIGGS
title_short NOT SLAVES OF ANOTHER IMAGE: BLACK WOMANHOOD REIMAGED IN THE FICTION OF FRANCES E.W. HARPER AND SUTTON E. GRIGGS
title_full NOT SLAVES OF ANOTHER IMAGE: BLACK WOMANHOOD REIMAGED IN THE FICTION OF FRANCES E.W. HARPER AND SUTTON E. GRIGGS
title_fullStr NOT SLAVES OF ANOTHER IMAGE: BLACK WOMANHOOD REIMAGED IN THE FICTION OF FRANCES E.W. HARPER AND SUTTON E. GRIGGS
title_full_unstemmed NOT SLAVES OF ANOTHER IMAGE: BLACK WOMANHOOD REIMAGED IN THE FICTION OF FRANCES E.W. HARPER AND SUTTON E. GRIGGS
title_sort not slaves of another image: black womanhood reimaged in the fiction of frances e.w. harper and sutton e. griggs
publisher OpenSIUC
publishDate 2020
url https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/theses/2728
https://opensiuc.lib.siu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=3742&context=theses
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