Legacy, Volume 23,Masalah 1Department of English, University of Massachusetts, 2006 |
Dari dalam buku
Hasil 1-3 dari 32
Halaman 23
... children . As Christina R. Accomando observes , because there " is no legal mother- hood under slavery ( except to the extent that maternal status determines the child's fate ; there are no positive rights of motherhood ) ... literal ...
... children . As Christina R. Accomando observes , because there " is no legal mother- hood under slavery ( except to the extent that maternal status determines the child's fate ; there are no positive rights of motherhood ) ... literal ...
Halaman 26
... child , she protects Linda from . falling into the hands of slave catchers . While the baby serves most importantly as a way of alerting Mrs. Bruce to Linda's possible capture , the child also provides Linda with solace and comfort ...
... child , she protects Linda from . falling into the hands of slave catchers . While the baby serves most importantly as a way of alerting Mrs. Bruce to Linda's possible capture , the child also provides Linda with solace and comfort ...
Halaman 28
... children they care for reflects the African American tradition of " other- mothering . " Stanlie M. James defines " othermoth- ers " as " those who assist blood mothers in the responsibilities of child care " ( 45 ) . James further ...
... children they care for reflects the African American tradition of " other- mothering . " Stanlie M. James defines " othermoth- ers " as " those who assist blood mothers in the responsibilities of child care " ( 45 ) . James further ...
Isi
Reading Contexture in Emily | 1 |
Motherhood as Resistance in Harriet Jacobss | 14 |
Caresse Crosby | 30 |
Hak Cipta | |
6 bagian lainnya tidak diperlihatkan
Edisi yang lain - Lihat semua
Istilah dan frasa umum
African American AME Zion American Women argues audience autobiography Bates Bates's Black Sun Press Black Women body Boston breast cancer Caresse Crosby Caresse Crosby Collection century child color Coman's death critical Crosby's culture Day in Technicolor Dickin Dickinson's letters disease editions Elizabeth Ellen Emily Dickinson epistolary escape essay father female feminine Fiction Foote's freedom friends gender genre Harriet Harriet Jacobs Harry Crosby Headline Fugitive Holland Hopkins Hopkins's identity Jacobs Journal Katharine Coman Katharine Lee Bates Katharine's Kay Boyle language Legacy Linda literary Literature lives maternal Meer modern modernist mother motherhood Nineteenth-Century novel pain Passionate poems poet political preach prose published readers relationship role sentiment sexual sister slave slavery social Spring stanza surgery Susan Tane Tane's poetry Technicolor tion Uncle Tom's Cabin University Wellesley College Willa Cather woman Women Writers words workers writing wrote York Zion Church