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TERA W. HUNTER
Bound in Wedlock: Slave and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century. Americans have long viewed marriage between a white man and a white woman as a sacred union. But marriages between African Americans have seldom been treated with the same reverence. This discriminatory legacy traces back to centuries of slavery, when the overwhelming ABOUT â TERA W. HUNTER Dr. Tera W. Hunter is Professor of History and African-American Studies at Princeton University. She is a scholar of labor, gender, race, and Southern history. She is a native of Miami, Florida, where she attended public schools. She received a B.A. degree from Duke University and a Ph.D. from Yale University. OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER Op-Eds / Ebony Magazine, Sanitation Strike. King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â he stated.SLAVE WAGES
By DREW GILPIN FAUST. he Emancipation Proclamation did not bring freedom to the four million African-Americans who lived in slavery in 1863. Instead, blacks had to claim and define that freedom in tens of thousands of acts of self-assertion during the decades that followed slaveryâs legal demise. THE HISTORY OF BLACK MARRIAGE Alexis Coe: I read your last book, To âJoy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, in graduate school, and it was a revelation to me.Your new book, Bound in Wedlock, is even more ambitious â and personal.You open the book with a marriage certificate that belonged to Ellen and Moses Hunter, your great-great-grandparents. THE LONG HISTORY OF CHILD-SNATCHING The Long History of Child-Snatching. Most Americans are shocked by the increasingly frequent scenes of wailing mothers and babies being torn apart by government officers at the Mexican border. The Trump administration has ratcheted up the separation of children from A MOTHERâS LETTER TO LINCOLN A Motherâs Letter to Lincoln. Op-Eds / New York Times. âI am a colored woman and my son was strong and able to fight for his country and the colored people have as much to fight for as any,â declared Hannah Johnson, from Buffalo, N.Y., in a July 31, 1863, letter to President Abraham Lincoln. What business did a black woman assume tohave
PROF. TERA HUNTER EXPLORES THE MEANING OF SLAVE MARRIAGES Tera Hunter, Professor of History and African American Studies at Princeton University and author of To Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, has penned the unprecedented first comprehensive history of African American marriage in the nineteenth century with her new book, Bound in Wedlock: Slavery and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century SOME DID CHOOSE TO RETURN TO SLAVERY BECAUSE THEY CHOSE Some Did Choose to Return to Slavery Because They Chose Family Over Everything. It is 1857 and Kanye, a carpenter, has finally saved up enough money to buy his freedom from Massa West. Trouble is, he has to leave his wife, Kimba, and five children on the plantation until he can buy them out of slavery as well. PUTTING AN ANTEBELLUM MYTH TO REST WAS slavery an idyllic world of stable families headed by married parents? The recent controversy over âThe Marriage Vow,â a document endorsed by the Republican presidential candidates Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum, might seem like just another example of how racial politics and historical ignorance are perennial features ofthe election cycle.
TERA W. HUNTER
Bound in Wedlock: Slave and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century. Americans have long viewed marriage between a white man and a white woman as a sacred union. But marriages between African Americans have seldom been treated with the same reverence. This discriminatory legacy traces back to centuries of slavery, when the overwhelming ABOUT â TERA W. HUNTER Dr. Tera W. Hunter is Professor of History and African-American Studies at Princeton University. She is a scholar of labor, gender, race, and Southern history. She is a native of Miami, Florida, where she attended public schools. She received a B.A. degree from Duke University and a Ph.D. from Yale University. OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER Op-Eds / Ebony Magazine, Sanitation Strike. King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â he stated.SLAVE WAGES
By DREW GILPIN FAUST. he Emancipation Proclamation did not bring freedom to the four million African-Americans who lived in slavery in 1863. Instead, blacks had to claim and define that freedom in tens of thousands of acts of self-assertion during the decades that followed slaveryâs legal demise. THE HISTORY OF BLACK MARRIAGE Alexis Coe: I read your last book, To âJoy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, in graduate school, and it was a revelation to me.Your new book, Bound in Wedlock, is even more ambitious â and personal.You open the book with a marriage certificate that belonged to Ellen and Moses Hunter, your great-great-grandparents. THE LONG HISTORY OF CHILD-SNATCHING The Long History of Child-Snatching. Most Americans are shocked by the increasingly frequent scenes of wailing mothers and babies being torn apart by government officers at the Mexican border. The Trump administration has ratcheted up the separation of children from A MOTHERâS LETTER TO LINCOLN A Motherâs Letter to Lincoln. Op-Eds / New York Times. âI am a colored woman and my son was strong and able to fight for his country and the colored people have as much to fight for as any,â declared Hannah Johnson, from Buffalo, N.Y., in a July 31, 1863, letter to President Abraham Lincoln. What business did a black woman assume tohave
PROF. TERA HUNTER EXPLORES THE MEANING OF SLAVE MARRIAGES Tera Hunter, Professor of History and African American Studies at Princeton University and author of To Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, has penned the unprecedented first comprehensive history of African American marriage in the nineteenth century with her new book, Bound in Wedlock: Slavery and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century SOME DID CHOOSE TO RETURN TO SLAVERY BECAUSE THEY CHOSE Some Did Choose to Return to Slavery Because They Chose Family Over Everything. It is 1857 and Kanye, a carpenter, has finally saved up enough money to buy his freedom from Massa West. Trouble is, he has to leave his wife, Kimba, and five children on the plantation until he can buy them out of slavery as well. PUTTING AN ANTEBELLUM MYTH TO REST WAS slavery an idyllic world of stable families headed by married parents? The recent controversy over âThe Marriage Vow,â a document endorsed by the Republican presidential candidates Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum, might seem like just another example of how racial politics and historical ignorance are perennial features ofthe election cycle.
CONTACT â TERA W. HUNTER Contact me for speaking engagements, interviews, and general questions. Iâm on Twitter @terawhunter. I donât Facebook. Thanksfor stopping by.
OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â hestated.
PROF. TERA HUNTER EXPLORES THE MEANING OF SLAVE MARRIAGES Tera Hunter, Professor of History and African American Studies at Princeton University and author of To Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, has penned the unprecedented first comprehensive history of African American marriage in the nineteenth century with her new book, Bound in Wedlock: Slavery and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century ART INSPIRED BY MY WORK Inspired by my research, THE WASHING SOCIETY investigates the intersection of history, underpaid work, immigration, and the sheer math of doing laundry. Drawing on each otherâs artistic practices, Sachs and Olesker present a stark yet poetic vision of those whose working lives often go unrecognized, turning a lens onto their hidden stories, which are often overlooked. SLAVERY â TERA W. HUNTER It is 1857 and Kanye, a carpenter, has finally saved up enough money to buy his freedom from Massa West. Some Did Choose to Return to Slavery Because They Chose Family Over Everything Read More SLAVERYâS ANTI-FAMILY POLITICS President Trumpâs slogan âMake America Great Againâ has always been an assertion in need of an explanation. It assumes that the country experienced some moment of now-lost greatness, but never identifies when, exactly, that moment was. TO âJOY MY FREEDOM Slave Wages. Book Reviews, To 'Joy My Freedom / New York Times. The New York Times reviewed my book To âJoy to my Freedom. PUTTING AN ANTEBELLUM MYTH TO REST WAS slavery an idyllic world of stable families headed by married parents? The recent controversy over âThe Marriage Vow,â a document endorsed by the Republican presidential candidates Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum, might seem like just another example of how racial politics and historical ignorance are perennial features ofthe election cycle.
WORSE THAN JEFF DAVIS? That âTwelve Years a Slaveâ won the Oscar for best picture is a stunning achievement in Hollywood cinematic history. Solomon Northupâs autobiography, upon which the movie was based, provides a powerful insiderâs account and critique of one of the nationâs founding institutions, while the film rendition disrupts the long tradition of derisive and romantic portrayals of slavery in WHAT WAS AFRICAN AMERICAN MARRIAGE? This is a fantastic conversation with Dr. Eddie Glaude, Princeton University. Here are a few of the highlights: A common assumption shared by liberals and conservatives alike is that low marriage rates in African American communities are a byproduct of slavery.TERA W. HUNTER
Bound in Wedlock: Slave and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century. Americans have long viewed marriage between a white man and a white woman as a sacred union. But marriages between African Americans have seldom been treated with the same reverence. This discriminatory legacy traces back to centuries of slavery, when the overwhelming ABOUT â TERA W. HUNTER Dr. Tera W. Hunter is Professor of History and African-American Studies at Princeton University. She is a scholar of labor, gender, race, and Southern history. She is a native of Miami, Florida, where she attended public schools. She received a B.A. degree from Duke University and a Ph.D. from Yale University. OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER Op-Eds / Ebony Magazine, Sanitation Strike. King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â he stated. THE HISTORY OF BLACK MARRIAGE Alexis Coe: I read your last book, To âJoy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, in graduate school, and it was a revelation to me.Your new book, Bound in Wedlock, is even more ambitious â and personal.You open the book with a marriage certificate that belonged to Ellen and Moses Hunter, your great-great-grandparents. OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â hestated.
SLAVE WAGES
By DREW GILPIN FAUST. he Emancipation Proclamation did not bring freedom to the four million African-Americans who lived in slavery in 1863. Instead, blacks had to claim and define that freedom in tens of thousands of acts of self-assertion during the decades that followed slaveryâs legal demise. THE LONG HISTORY OF CHILD-SNATCHING The Long History of Child-Snatching. Most Americans are shocked by the increasingly frequent scenes of wailing mothers and babies being torn apart by government officers at the Mexican border. The Trump administration has ratcheted up the separation of children from SOME DID CHOOSE TO RETURN TO SLAVERY BECAUSE THEY CHOSE Some Did Choose to Return to Slavery Because They Chose Family Over Everything. It is 1857 and Kanye, a carpenter, has finally saved up enough money to buy his freedom from Massa West. Trouble is, he has to leave his wife, Kimba, and five children on the plantation until he can buy them out of slavery as well. PROF. TERA HUNTER EXPLORES THE MEANING OF SLAVE MARRIAGES Tera Hunter, Professor of History and African American Studies at Princeton University and author of To Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, has penned the unprecedented first comprehensive history of African American marriage in the nineteenth century with her new book, Bound in Wedlock: Slavery and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century A MOTHERâS LETTER TO LINCOLN A Motherâs Letter to Lincoln. Op-Eds / New York Times. âI am a colored woman and my son was strong and able to fight for his country and the colored people have as much to fight for as any,â declared Hannah Johnson, from Buffalo, N.Y., in a July 31, 1863, letter to President Abraham Lincoln. What business did a black woman assume tohave
TERA W. HUNTER
Bound in Wedlock: Slave and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century. Americans have long viewed marriage between a white man and a white woman as a sacred union. But marriages between African Americans have seldom been treated with the same reverence. This discriminatory legacy traces back to centuries of slavery, when the overwhelming ABOUT â TERA W. HUNTER Dr. Tera W. Hunter is Professor of History and African-American Studies at Princeton University. She is a scholar of labor, gender, race, and Southern history. She is a native of Miami, Florida, where she attended public schools. She received a B.A. degree from Duke University and a Ph.D. from Yale University. OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER Op-Eds / Ebony Magazine, Sanitation Strike. King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â he stated. THE HISTORY OF BLACK MARRIAGE Alexis Coe: I read your last book, To âJoy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, in graduate school, and it was a revelation to me.Your new book, Bound in Wedlock, is even more ambitious â and personal.You open the book with a marriage certificate that belonged to Ellen and Moses Hunter, your great-great-grandparents. OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â hestated.
SLAVE WAGES
By DREW GILPIN FAUST. he Emancipation Proclamation did not bring freedom to the four million African-Americans who lived in slavery in 1863. Instead, blacks had to claim and define that freedom in tens of thousands of acts of self-assertion during the decades that followed slaveryâs legal demise. THE LONG HISTORY OF CHILD-SNATCHING The Long History of Child-Snatching. Most Americans are shocked by the increasingly frequent scenes of wailing mothers and babies being torn apart by government officers at the Mexican border. The Trump administration has ratcheted up the separation of children from SOME DID CHOOSE TO RETURN TO SLAVERY BECAUSE THEY CHOSE Some Did Choose to Return to Slavery Because They Chose Family Over Everything. It is 1857 and Kanye, a carpenter, has finally saved up enough money to buy his freedom from Massa West. Trouble is, he has to leave his wife, Kimba, and five children on the plantation until he can buy them out of slavery as well. A MOTHERâS LETTER TO LINCOLN A Motherâs Letter to Lincoln. Op-Eds / New York Times. âI am a colored woman and my son was strong and able to fight for his country and the colored people have as much to fight for as any,â declared Hannah Johnson, from Buffalo, N.Y., in a July 31, 1863, letter to President Abraham Lincoln. What business did a black woman assume tohave
PROF. TERA HUNTER EXPLORES THE MEANING OF SLAVE MARRIAGES Tera Hunter, Professor of History and African American Studies at Princeton University and author of To Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, has penned the unprecedented first comprehensive history of African American marriage in the nineteenth century with her new book, Bound in Wedlock: Slavery and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century CONTACT â TERA W. HUNTER Contact me for speaking engagements, interviews, and general questions. Iâm on Twitter @terawhunter. I donât Facebook. Thanksfor stopping by.
MEDIA â TERA W. HUNTER In this audio conversation with Dr. Eddie Glaude, we explore myths that conservatives and liberals hold about black marriages.BOOK REVIEWS
The New York Times reviewed my book To âJoy to my Freedom. Book Review â âGoddess of Anarchy,â by Jacqueline Jones. Book ReviewsSLAVE WAGES
By DREW GILPIN FAUST. he Emancipation Proclamation did not bring freedom to the four million African-Americans who lived in slavery in 1863. Instead, blacks had to claim and define that freedom in tens of thousands of acts of self-assertion during the decades that followed slaveryâs legal demise. SLAVERY â TERA W. HUNTER It is 1857 and Kanye, a carpenter, has finally saved up enough money to buy his freedom from Massa West. Some Did Choose to Return to Slavery Because They Chose Family Over Everything Read More ART INSPIRED BY MY WORK Inspired by my research, THE WASHING SOCIETY investigates the intersection of history, underpaid work, immigration, and the sheer math of doing laundry. Drawing on each otherâs artistic practices, Sachs and Olesker present a stark yet poetic vision of those whose working lives often go unrecognized, turning a lens onto their hidden stories, which are often overlooked. SLAVERYâS ANTI-FAMILY POLITICS President Trumpâs slogan âMake America Great Againâ has always been an assertion in need of an explanation. It assumes that the country experienced some moment of now-lost greatness, but never identifies when, exactly, that moment was. TO âJOY MY FREEDOM The New York Times reviewed my book To âJoy to my Freedom. Search for: Recent Posts. The History of Black Marriage; The Long History ofChild-Snatching
PUTTING AN ANTEBELLUM MYTH TO REST WAS slavery an idyllic world of stable families headed by married parents? The recent controversy over âThe Marriage Vow,â a document endorsed by the Republican presidential candidates Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum, might seem like just another example of how racial politics and historical ignorance are perennial features ofthe election cycle.
WORSE THAN JEFF DAVIS? That âTwelve Years a Slaveâ won the Oscar for best picture is a stunning achievement in Hollywood cinematic history. Solomon Northupâs autobiography, upon which the movie was based, provides a powerful insiderâs account and critique of one of the nationâs founding institutions, while the film rendition disrupts the long tradition of derisive and romantic portrayals of slavery inTERA W. HUNTER
Bound in Wedlock: Slave and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century. Americans have long viewed marriage between a white man and a white woman as a sacred union. But marriages between African Americans have seldom been treated with the same reverence. This discriminatory legacy traces back to centuries of slavery, when the overwhelming ABOUT â TERA W. HUNTER Dr. Tera W. Hunter is Professor of History and African-American Studies at Princeton University. She is a scholar of labor, gender, race, and Southern history. She is a native of Miami, Florida, where she attended public schools. She received a B.A. degree from Duke University and a Ph.D. from Yale University. OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER Op-Eds / Ebony Magazine, Sanitation Strike. King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â he stated. THE HISTORY OF BLACK MARRIAGE Alexis Coe: I read your last book, To âJoy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, in graduate school, and it was a revelation to me.Your new book, Bound in Wedlock, is even more ambitious â and personal.You open the book with a marriage certificate that belonged to Ellen and Moses Hunter, your great-great-grandparents. OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â hestated.
SLAVE WAGES
By DREW GILPIN FAUST. he Emancipation Proclamation did not bring freedom to the four million African-Americans who lived in slavery in 1863. Instead, blacks had to claim and define that freedom in tens of thousands of acts of self-assertion during the decades that followed slaveryâs legal demise. THE LONG HISTORY OF CHILD-SNATCHING The Long History of Child-Snatching. Most Americans are shocked by the increasingly frequent scenes of wailing mothers and babies being torn apart by government officers at the Mexican border. The Trump administration has ratcheted up the separation of children from SOME DID CHOOSE TO RETURN TO SLAVERY BECAUSE THEY CHOSE Some Did Choose to Return to Slavery Because They Chose Family Over Everything. It is 1857 and Kanye, a carpenter, has finally saved up enough money to buy his freedom from Massa West. Trouble is, he has to leave his wife, Kimba, and five children on the plantation until he can buy them out of slavery as well. A MOTHERâS LETTER TO LINCOLN A Motherâs Letter to Lincoln. Op-Eds / New York Times. âI am a colored woman and my son was strong and able to fight for his country and the colored people have as much to fight for as any,â declared Hannah Johnson, from Buffalo, N.Y., in a July 31, 1863, letter to President Abraham Lincoln. What business did a black woman assume tohave
PROF. TERA HUNTER EXPLORES THE MEANING OF SLAVE MARRIAGES Tera Hunter, Professor of History and African American Studies at Princeton University and author of To Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, has penned the unprecedented first comprehensive history of African American marriage in the nineteenth century with her new book, Bound in Wedlock: Slavery and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth CenturyTERA W. HUNTER
Bound in Wedlock: Slave and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century. Americans have long viewed marriage between a white man and a white woman as a sacred union. But marriages between African Americans have seldom been treated with the same reverence. This discriminatory legacy traces back to centuries of slavery, when the overwhelming ABOUT â TERA W. HUNTER Dr. Tera W. Hunter is Professor of History and African-American Studies at Princeton University. She is a scholar of labor, gender, race, and Southern history. She is a native of Miami, Florida, where she attended public schools. She received a B.A. degree from Duke University and a Ph.D. from Yale University. OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER Op-Eds / Ebony Magazine, Sanitation Strike. King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â he stated. THE HISTORY OF BLACK MARRIAGE Alexis Coe: I read your last book, To âJoy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, in graduate school, and it was a revelation to me.Your new book, Bound in Wedlock, is even more ambitious â and personal.You open the book with a marriage certificate that belonged to Ellen and Moses Hunter, your great-great-grandparents. OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â hestated.
SLAVE WAGES
By DREW GILPIN FAUST. he Emancipation Proclamation did not bring freedom to the four million African-Americans who lived in slavery in 1863. Instead, blacks had to claim and define that freedom in tens of thousands of acts of self-assertion during the decades that followed slaveryâs legal demise. THE LONG HISTORY OF CHILD-SNATCHING The Long History of Child-Snatching. Most Americans are shocked by the increasingly frequent scenes of wailing mothers and babies being torn apart by government officers at the Mexican border. The Trump administration has ratcheted up the separation of children from SOME DID CHOOSE TO RETURN TO SLAVERY BECAUSE THEY CHOSE Some Did Choose to Return to Slavery Because They Chose Family Over Everything. It is 1857 and Kanye, a carpenter, has finally saved up enough money to buy his freedom from Massa West. Trouble is, he has to leave his wife, Kimba, and five children on the plantation until he can buy them out of slavery as well. A MOTHERâS LETTER TO LINCOLN A Motherâs Letter to Lincoln. Op-Eds / New York Times. âI am a colored woman and my son was strong and able to fight for his country and the colored people have as much to fight for as any,â declared Hannah Johnson, from Buffalo, N.Y., in a July 31, 1863, letter to President Abraham Lincoln. What business did a black woman assume tohave
PROF. TERA HUNTER EXPLORES THE MEANING OF SLAVE MARRIAGES Tera Hunter, Professor of History and African American Studies at Princeton University and author of To Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, has penned the unprecedented first comprehensive history of African American marriage in the nineteenth century with her new book, Bound in Wedlock: Slavery and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century CONTACT â TERA W. HUNTER Contact me for speaking engagements, interviews, and general questions. Iâm on Twitter @terawhunter. I donât Facebook. Thanksfor stopping by.
BOOK REVIEWS
The New York Times reviewed my book To âJoy to my Freedom. Book Review â âGoddess of Anarchy,â by Jacqueline Jones. Book ReviewsSLAVE WAGES
By DREW GILPIN FAUST. he Emancipation Proclamation did not bring freedom to the four million African-Americans who lived in slavery in 1863. Instead, blacks had to claim and define that freedom in tens of thousands of acts of self-assertion during the decades that followed slaveryâs legal demise. SLAVERY â TERA W. HUNTER It is 1857 and Kanye, a carpenter, has finally saved up enough money to buy his freedom from Massa West. Some Did Choose to Return to Slavery Because They Chose Family Over Everything Read More SLAVERYâS ANTI-FAMILY POLITICS President Trumpâs slogan âMake America Great Againâ has always been an assertion in need of an explanation. It assumes that the country experienced some moment of now-lost greatness, but never identifies when, exactly, that moment was. ART INSPIRED BY MY WORK Inspired by my research, THE WASHING SOCIETY investigates the intersection of history, underpaid work, immigration, and the sheer math of doing laundry. Drawing on each otherâs artistic practices, Sachs and Olesker present a stark yet poetic vision of those whose working lives often go unrecognized, turning a lens onto their hidden stories, which are often overlooked. TO âJOY MY FREEDOM The New York Times reviewed my book To âJoy to my Freedom. Search for: Recent Posts. The History of Black Marriage; The Long History ofChild-Snatching
PUTTING AN ANTEBELLUM MYTH TO REST WAS slavery an idyllic world of stable families headed by married parents? The recent controversy over âThe Marriage Vow,â a document endorsed by the Republican presidential candidates Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum, might seem like just another example of how racial politics and historical ignorance are perennial features ofthe election cycle.
WORSE THAN JEFF DAVIS? That âTwelve Years a Slaveâ won the Oscar for best picture is a stunning achievement in Hollywood cinematic history. Solomon Northupâs autobiography, upon which the movie was based, provides a powerful insiderâs account and critique of one of the nationâs founding institutions, while the film rendition disrupts the long tradition of derisive and romantic portrayals of slavery in WHAT WAS AFRICAN AMERICAN MARRIAGE? This is a fantastic conversation with Dr. Eddie Glaude, Princeton University. Here are a few of the highlights: A common assumption shared by liberals and conservatives alike is that low marriage rates in African American communities are a byproduct of slavery.TERA W. HUNTER
Americans have long viewed marriage between a white man and a white woman as a sacred union. But marriages between African Americans have seldom been treated with the same reverence. ABOUT â TERA W. HUNTER Dr. Tera W. Hunter is Professor of History and African-American Studies at Princeton University. She is a scholar of labor, gender, race, and Southern history. OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â hestated.
CONTACT â TERA W. HUNTER Contact me for speaking engagements, interviews, and general questions. Iâm on Twitter @terawhunter. I donât Facebook. Thanksfor stopping by.
THE HISTORY OF BLACK MARRIAGE Alexis Coe: I read your last book, To âJoy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, in graduate school, and it was a revelation to me.Your new book, Bound in Wedlock, is even more ambitious â and personal.You open the book with a marriage certificate that belonged to Ellen and Moses Hunter, your great-great-grandparents.SLAVE WAGES
By DREW GILPIN FAUST. he Emancipation Proclamation did not bring freedom to the four million African-Americans who lived in slavery in 1863. Instead, blacks had to claim and define that freedom in tens of thousands of acts of self-assertion during the decades that followed slaveryâs legal demise. THE LONG HISTORY OF CHILD-SNATCHING Enslaved African-Americans often experienced nightmares like these. The likelihood that slaves would be separated from kin increased as slavery expanded west into the cotton- and sugar-producing lands acquired through the Louisiana Purchase. A MOTHERâS LETTER TO LINCOLN âI am a colored woman and my son was strong and able to fight for his country and the colored people have as much to fight for as any,â declared Hannah Johnson, from Buffalo, N.Y., in a July 31, 1863, letter to President Abraham Lincoln. SOME DID CHOOSE TO RETURN TO SLAVERY BECAUSE THEY CHOSE Prejudicial laws like these were common in the slave-owning South to snare freed blacks and force them back into slavery. Some states, like the state of Georgia, passed expulsion laws that required blacks who were manumitted to leave the state within a year of theiremancipation.
PROF. TERA HUNTER EXPLORES THE MEANING OF SLAVE MARRIAGES Tera Hunter, Professor of History and African American Studies at Princeton University and author of To Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, has penned the unprecedented first comprehensive history of African American marriage in the nineteenth century with her new book, Bound in Wedlock: Slavery and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth CenturyTERA W. HUNTER
Americans have long viewed marriage between a white man and a white woman as a sacred union. But marriages between African Americans have seldom been treated with the same reverence. ABOUT â TERA W. HUNTER Dr. Tera W. Hunter is Professor of History and African-American Studies at Princeton University. She is a scholar of labor, gender, race, and Southern history. OP-EDS â TERA W. HUNTER King had put his life on the line defending some of the most exploited laborers in the nation who literally did the dirty work of others. âWhenever you are engaged in work that serves humanity and is for the building of humanity, it has dignity, and it has worth,â hestated.
CONTACT â TERA W. HUNTER Contact me for speaking engagements, interviews, and general questions. Iâm on Twitter @terawhunter. I donât Facebook. Thanksfor stopping by.
THE HISTORY OF BLACK MARRIAGE Alexis Coe: I read your last book, To âJoy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, in graduate school, and it was a revelation to me.Your new book, Bound in Wedlock, is even more ambitious â and personal.You open the book with a marriage certificate that belonged to Ellen and Moses Hunter, your great-great-grandparents.SLAVE WAGES
By DREW GILPIN FAUST. he Emancipation Proclamation did not bring freedom to the four million African-Americans who lived in slavery in 1863. Instead, blacks had to claim and define that freedom in tens of thousands of acts of self-assertion during the decades that followed slaveryâs legal demise. THE LONG HISTORY OF CHILD-SNATCHING Enslaved African-Americans often experienced nightmares like these. The likelihood that slaves would be separated from kin increased as slavery expanded west into the cotton- and sugar-producing lands acquired through the Louisiana Purchase. A MOTHERâS LETTER TO LINCOLN âI am a colored woman and my son was strong and able to fight for his country and the colored people have as much to fight for as any,â declared Hannah Johnson, from Buffalo, N.Y., in a July 31, 1863, letter to President Abraham Lincoln. SOME DID CHOOSE TO RETURN TO SLAVERY BECAUSE THEY CHOSE Prejudicial laws like these were common in the slave-owning South to snare freed blacks and force them back into slavery. Some states, like the state of Georgia, passed expulsion laws that required blacks who were manumitted to leave the state within a year of theiremancipation.
PROF. TERA HUNTER EXPLORES THE MEANING OF SLAVE MARRIAGES Tera Hunter, Professor of History and African American Studies at Princeton University and author of To Joy My Freedom: Southern Black Womenâs Lives and Labors After the Civil War, has penned the unprecedented first comprehensive history of African American marriage in the nineteenth century with her new book, Bound in Wedlock: Slavery and Free Black Marriage in the Nineteenth Century CONTACT â TERA W. HUNTER Contact me for speaking engagements, interviews, and general questions. Iâm on Twitter @terawhunter. I donât Facebook. Thanksfor stopping by.
BOOK REVIEWS
The New York Times reviewed my book To âJoy to my Freedom. Book Review â âGoddess of Anarchy,â by Jacqueline Jones. Book ReviewsSLAVE WAGES
By DREW GILPIN FAUST. he Emancipation Proclamation did not bring freedom to the four million African-Americans who lived in slavery in 1863. Instead, blacks had to claim and define that freedom in tens of thousands of acts of self-assertion during the decades that followed slaveryâs legal demise. SLAVERY â TERA W. HUNTER It is 1857 and Kanye, a carpenter, has finally saved up enough money to buy his freedom from Massa West. Some Did Choose to Return to Slavery Because They Chose Family Over Everything Read More SLAVERYâS ANTI-FAMILY POLITICS Most people assume he means the 1950s, an era before the modern civil rights movement dismantled Jim Crow. But vanquished Alabama Senate candidate Roy Moore argued that the 1850s might be ART INSPIRED BY MY WORK Inspired by my research, THE WASHING SOCIETY investigates the intersection of history, underpaid work, immigration, and the sheer math of doing laundry. Drawing on each otherâs artistic practices, Sachs and Olesker present a stark yet poetic vision of those whose working lives often go unrecognized, turning a lens onto their hidden stories, which are often overlooked. TO âJOY MY FREEDOM The New York Times reviewed my book To âJoy to my Freedom. Search for: Recent Posts. The History of Black Marriage; The Long History ofChild-Snatching
PUTTING AN ANTEBELLUM MYTH TO REST WAS slavery an idyllic world of stable families headed by married parents? The recent controversy over âThe Marriage Vow,â a document endorsed by the Republican presidential candidates Michele Bachmann and Rick Santorum, might seem like just another example of how racial politics and historical ignorance are perennial features ofthe election cycle.
WORSE THAN JEFF DAVIS? That âTwelve Years a Slaveâ won the Oscar for best picture is a stunning achievement in Hollywood cinematic history. Solomon Northupâs autobiography, upon which the movie was based, provides a powerful insiderâs account and critique of one of the nationâs founding institutions, while the film rendition disrupts the long tradition of derisive and romantic portrayals of slavery in WHAT WAS AFRICAN AMERICAN MARRIAGE? This is a fantastic conversation with Dr. Eddie Glaude, Princeton University. Here are a few of the highlights: A common assumption shared by liberals and conservatives alike is that low marriage rates in African American communities are a byproduct of slavery.Skip to content
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âTHE WAY TO RIGHT WRONGS IS TO TURN THE LIGHT OF TRUTH UPON THEM.ââ - IDA B. WELLS__ Play Video
Art inspired by my book To âJoy With Freedom. More hereMY ARTICLES
2018 MARY NICKLISS PRIZE WINNER 2018 Mary Nickliss PrizeRead More
Op-Eds
THE LONG HISTORY OF CHILD-SNATCHING Most Americans are shockedRead More
Op-Eds
SOME DID CHOOSE TO RETURN TO SLAVERY BECAUSE THEY CHOSE FAMILY OVEREVERYTHING
It is 1857 and
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MY EXPERTISE
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U.S. Southern History and Culture*
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American Slavery and Freedom*
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BOUND IN WEDLOCK: SLAVE AND FREE BLACK MARRIAGE IN THE NINETEENTHCENTURY
Americans have long viewed marriage between a white man and a white woman as a sacred union. But marriages between African Americans have seldom been treated with the same reverence. This discriminatory legacy traces back to centuries of slavery, when the overwhelming majority of black married couples were bound in servitude as well as wedlock. Though their unions were not legally recognized, slaves commonly married, fully aware that their marital bonds would be sustained or nullified according to the whims of white masters.Read Excerpt
TO 'JOY MY FREEDOM: SOUTHERN BLACK WOMEN'S LIVES AND LABORS AFTER THECIVIL WAR
Winner of three major book awards. * H. L. Mitchell Award, 1998 (Southern Historical Association); * Letitia Brown Memorial Book Prize, 1997 (Association of Black Womenâs Historians); * Book of the Year Award, 1997 (International Labor HistoryAssociation)
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