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African-American women fought for their freedom with courage and vigor during and after the Civil War. Leslie Schwalm explores the vital roles of enslaved and formerly enslaved women on the rice plantations of lowcountry South Carolina, both in antebellum plantation life and in the wartime collapse of slavery. From there, she chronicles their efforts as freedwomen to recover from the impact of the war while redefining their lives and labor. Freedwomen asserted their own ideas of what freedom meant and insisted on important changes in the work they performed both for white employers and in their own homes. As Schwalm shows, these women rejected the most unpleasant or demeaning tasks, guarded the prerogatives they gained under the South's slave economy, and defended their hard-won freedoms against unwanted intervention by Northern whites and the efforts of former owners to restore slavery's social and economic relations during Reconstruction. A bold challenge to entrenched notions, A Hard Fight for We places African American women at the center of the South's transition from a slave society.
Leslie A. Schwalm is a professor and chair of Gender, Women's, & Sexuality Studies at the University of Iowa. She is the author of Emancipation's Diaspora: Race and Reconstruction in the Upper Midwest.
Acknowledgments xiIntroduction 1PART 1: SLAVERY1. "Women Always Did This Work": Slave Women and Plantation Labor 192. "Ties to Bind Them All Together": The Social and Reproductive Labor of Slave Women 47PART 2: SLAVERY'S WARTIME CRISIS3. "A Hard Fight for We": Slave Women and the Civil War 754. "Without Mercy": The End of War and the Final Destruction of Lowcountry Slavery 116PART 3: DEFINING AND DEFENDING FREEDOM5. "The Simple Act of Emancipation": The First Year of Freedom 1476. "In Their Own Way": Women and Work in the Postbellum South 1877. "And So to Establish Family Relations": Race, Gender, and Family In the Postbellum Crisis of Free Labor 234 Notes 269Bibliography 363Index 383Illustrations follow pages 46 and 144
Winner of the Willie Lee Rose Publication Prize, the Southern Association of Women Historians, 1998.— the Southern Association of Women Historians