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White Gloves, Black Nation
White Gloves, Black Nation
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White Gloves, Black Nation

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This ambitious transnational history considers Haitian womens political life during and after the United States occupation of Haiti (191534). The two decades following the occupation were some of the most politically dynamic and promising times in Haitis modern history, but the history of womens political organizing in this period has received scant attention. Tracing elite and middle-class womens activism and intellectual practice from the countryside of Kenscoff, Haiti, to Philadelphia, the Belgian Congo, and back to Port-au-Prince, this book tells the story of Haitian womens essential role as co-curators of modern Haitian citizenship.Set in a period when national belonging was articulated in philosophies of African authenticity, revolutionary nostalgia, and working-class politics, Grace Sanders Johnson considers how an emerging educated and professional class of women who understood themselves as descendants of the Haitian Revolution established alternative claims to citizenship that included, but were not limited to, suffrage and radicalism. Sanders Johnson argues that these womens political practice incorporated strategic class performance, extravagant sartorial sensibilities, and an insistence on self-promotion and preservation that challenged the exceptional trope of the martyred male revolutionary hero. Bringing her subjects vividly to life, she reveals their politics of wayfaring, moving deliberately if sometimes ineffectively through the radical milieu of the twentieth century.
Undertitel
Women, Citizenship, and Political Wayfaring in Haiti
ISBN
9781469673707
Språk
Engelska
Utgivningsdatum
2023-04-11
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