Talk with you like a woman African American women, justice, and reform in New York, 1890-1935 /
محفوظ في:
المؤلف الرئيسي: | |
---|---|
مؤلف مشترك: | |
التنسيق: | الكتروني كتاب الكتروني |
اللغة: | الإنجليزية |
منشور في: |
Chapel Hill [N.C.] :
University of North Carolina Press,
2010.
|
سلاسل: | Gender & American culture.
|
الموضوعات: | |
الوصول للمادة أونلاين: | An electronic book accessible through the World Wide Web; click to view |
الوسوم: |
إضافة وسم
لا توجد وسوم, كن أول من يضع وسما على هذه التسجيلة!
|
جدول المحتويات:
- To live a fuller and freer life : black women migrants' expectations and New York's urban realities, 1890-1927
- The only one that would be interested in me : police brutality, black women's protection, and the New York Race Riot of 1900
- I want to save these girls : single black women's protectors--the White Rose Home and the National League for the Protection of Colored Women, 1895-1911
- Colored women of hard and vicious character : respectability, domesticity, and crime, 1893-1933
- Tragedy of the colored girl in court : the National Urban League and New York's Women's Court, 1911-1931
- In danger of becoming morally depraved : single black women, working-class black families, and New York State's Wayward Minor Laws, 1917-1928
- A rather bright and good-looking colored girl : black women's sexuality, "harmful intimacy," and attempts to regulate desire, 1917-1928
- I don't live on my sister, I living of myself : parole, gender, and black families, 1905-1935
- She would be better off in the South : sending women on parole to their southern kin, 1920-1935
- Conclusion: thank god I am independent one more time.