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Elizabeth Keckley Reader, Vol. 1: Writing Self, Writing Nation

Contributor(s): Smith McKoy, Sheila (Editor), Domina, Lynn (Contribution by), Elam, Michele (Contribution by)

ISBN: 9780989609258

Publisher: Eno Publishers

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Pub Date: June 2, 2016

Dewey: B

LCCN: 2015960648

Lexile Code: 0000

Features: Bibliography, Index, Price on Product

Target Age Group: NA to NA

Physical Info: 0.80" H x 8.90" L x 5.90" W ( 0.90 lbs) 312 pages

Series: Elizabeth Keckley Reader

Descriptions, Reviews, etc.

Description: he Elizabeth Keckley Reader: Volume One--Writing Self, Writing Nation, offers a collection of essays and other works inspired by the life of Elizabeth Keckley, a slave in Hillsborough, N.C., who eventually bought her freedom. She became a noted seamstress in Civil War-era Washington DC, and was most famously the confidante of Mary Lincoln.

Review Quotes:

The Elizabeth Keckley Reader, a magnificent collection of creative and scholarly works, examines and honors the heroic life of a courageous and defiant African American woman who overcame slavery, economic privation, and brutal physical punishment to free herself, own her being, speak with her own voice, and lead an independent life as entrepreneur, educator, and civic leader. Elizabeth Keckley's remarkable autobiography reveals the anguished connection between black and white lives in nineteenth-century America with focus on her uncommon relationship with President Abraham Lincoln's wife, Mary Todd Lincoln. This evocative and erudite collection speaks to women everywhere for it lays bare the soul of an unforgettable woman whose indomitable spirit caused her to rise again and again to face whatever comes, to take the journey, to show the way, and to make her contribution to life and to history.

--Barbara Paul-Emile, PhD, Maurice E. Goldman Distinguished Professor of Arts and Sciences, Professor of English, Bentley University

The writer has produced the first of her two-part work on Elizabeth Keckley, resulting in a compelling account of a strong and determined slave girl whose contributions in later life sealed her legacy. As Sheila Smith McKoy notes, Keckley refused to be "erased" from history and became an entrepreneur of enduring fame. She also takes her place among the nineteenth-century black women writers of acclaim.

--Jessie Carney Smith, Dean of the Library and Camille Cosby Distinguished Chair in the Humanities, Fisk University

Presented in a series of two volumes, the Elizabeth Keckley Reader breaks new ground in recovering late nineteenth-century texts and contexts, and promotes literary historical inquiry by way of essays, poetry, and drama contributed by an impressive group of scholars. Indeed, the Keckley Reader is an innovative project, a crucial contribution to ongoing studies of African American autobiographical acts and American culture.

--Jerry W. Ward Jr., author of The Katrina Papers: A Journal of Trauma and Recovery, Trouble the Water, Black Southern Voices, and The Richard Wright Encyclopedia

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