The Voice of Anna Julia Cooper

Including A Voice from the South and Other Important Essays, Papers, and Letters

Edited by Charles Lemert University Professor of Social Theory, Emeritus, Wesleyan University, Esme Bhan

Publication date:

29 December 1997

Length of book:

265 pages

Publisher

Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Dimensions:

232x160mm
6x9"

ISBN-13: 9780847684076

Recently Anna Julia Cooper has emerged as the most important classic writer in the tradition of African American feminist thought. Mary Helen Washington described Cooper's work as "the most precise, forceful, well-argued statement of black feminist thought to come out of the nineteenth century." This is the first collection of all of Cooper's major writings, including many never before published. It includes all of the essays from her famous book, A Voice from the South, in addition to many other essays and letters accessible only in archives until now. The organization of this important new collection lends itself to a clearer understanding of the major themes and contributions of Cooper's thought, her development as a thinker and writer, and the critiques and controversies surrounding her work. Lemert and Bhan introduce Cooper as an activist, settlement founder, school teacher, college president, linguist, and scholar—a life that paralleled the prodigious accomplishments of W.E.B. Du Bois in so many ways.
A much-needed addition to the dearth of primary sources which will illuminate one of history's most important feminist figures.