Working through this. #2023reading #socialjusticereads #womanism
Working through this. #2023reading #socialjusticereads #womanism
I‘m gonna do that next time I lose a case ⚖️
As with most of my recent nonfiction selections, I chose this book as a result of both the 2016 and 2020 elections in which an overwhelming number of white women voted for a racist, xenophobic and misogynistic megalomaniac.
Although, this is an interesting read, I just wish there was a little more... it felt like something was missing.
“Southern communities, lawmakers, and courts recognized slave-owning women as individuals able to acquire and exercise mastery over enslaved people, s is evident from laws passed throughout the South. Laws dating back to the colonial period routinely recognized the mistresses owned enslaved people in their own right, and these same laws acknowledged the fact that these women were capable of exercising slave mastery. Stephanie Jones - Rogers.
I‘ve been eager to start this one. Digging in!
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