Geometry.Net - the online learning center
Home  - Book_Author - Harper Frances Ellen Watkins
e99.com Bookstore
  
Images 
Newsgroups
Page 3     41-60 of 94    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20
A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

         Harper Frances Ellen Watkins:     more detail
  1. Biography - Harper, Frances Ellen Watkins (1825-1911): An article from: Contemporary Authors Online by Gale Reference Team, 2007-01-01
  2. Poems by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper 1825-1911, 1898-12-31
  3. Poems on miscellaneous subjects by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper 1825-1911, 1857-12-31
  4. Idylls of the Bible by Frances Ellen Watkins Harper 1825-1911, 1901-12-31
  5. "One great bundle of humanity": Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911) by Margaret Hope Bacon, 1989
  6. Iola Leroy, or, Shadows uplifted by Frances Ellen Watkins, 1825-1911 Harper, 2009-10-26
  7. MINNIES SACRIFICECL (Black Women Writer Series) by Frances E. W. Harper, Frances Smith Foster, 1994-06-01
  8. Iola (Black Classics) by Frances E. W. Harper, 1996-09
  9. Discarded Legacy: Politics and Poetics in the Life of Frances E.W. Harper, 1825-1911 (African American Life) by Melba Joyce Boyd, 1994-06

41. Detailed Record
in the life of Frances EW Harper, 18251911 • By Melba English • Genre/FormBiography • Named Person Frances Ellen Watkins Harper • Material Type
http://worldcatlibraries.org/wcpa/ow/34ff7860776c2960a19afeb4da09e526.html
About WorldCat Help For Librarians Discarded legacy : politics and poetics in the life of Frances E.W. Harper, 1825-1911
Melba Joyce Boyd
Find libraries with the item Enter a postal code, state, province or country
WorldCat is provided by OCLC Online Computer Library Center, Inc. on behalf of its member libraries.

42. Early 19th Cent.American
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (18251911) Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Frances EllenWatkins Harper Atlanta Offerings Poems @ Humanities Text Initiative Iola
http://www.colorado.edu/English/amlit/e19c.html
Early Nineteenth Century
American Literature
This web page contains links to websites for the time period encompassing the early nineteenth century in American Literature. The page is divided into two sections: General Resources and Authors and their Works. Within the category of authors and their works, you will find an alphabetical listing by author; listed under the authors' names you will find web pages devoted to the individual authors (author pages), online texts, and criticism and reviews when available. If you are unable to find a particular author that you believe should be on this page, check either the Late Nineteenth Century or Colonial to 1800 pages. In addition, this website includes Modern American Literature and Contemporary American Literature , as well as, an overview of American Literary Resources available on the Internet. You can also return to the table of contents for The Archive General Resources American Authors A Celebration of Women Writers: 1801 - 1900 The Daguerreian Society - galleries of 19th century Daguerreotype photos.
Documenting The American South
Materials on Slavery From the UNC-CH Collections - an extensive collection of slave narratives.

43. Other Abolitionists
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (18251911) Frances Ellen Watkins was the best-knownand most respected nineteenth century African American poet and novelist.
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4p4439.html
Part 1: 1450-1750 Part 2: 1750-1805 Part 3: 1791-1831
Narrative
Resource Bank Teacher's Guide
Other Abolitionists
Resource Bank Contents

The abolitionist movement was composed of thousands of people who devoted significant portions of their lives to ending slavery. Its leadership was not confined to famous figures such as David Walker, Harriet Tubman, William Lloyd Garrison and Frederick Douglass. Many others made significant contributions to the abolitionist crusade. Here are a few examples.
MARIA STEWART (1803-1879)
Maria Stewart, a free-born African American woman, was the first American-born woman of any color to deliver a series of public lectures. Fired by political and religious zeal, Stewart began lecturing and writing pamphlets in 1831. She felt driven to better the lives of her fellow African Americans, and lectured on a whole range of topics of vital importance to the black community, including abolition, equal rights, colonization, educational opportunities, and racial pride and unity. She advocated black self-determination and independence from whites. In this sense she was one of the most radical spokespersons of her time.
Her career as a public speaker was cut short, however. There was strong opposition to women lecturing in public, even from some members of the black community. Stewart weathered the criticism valiantly for about a year, but then decided to cease lecturing. Instead, she launched a long and distinguished career as an educator. Stewart taught in New York and eventually opened two schools for free African American children in Washington, D.C.

44. Women And Minorities In Dictionary Of Modern American Philosophers
59. Harkness, Georgia Elma, 18911974, Women/Cauc. 60. Harper, Frances Ellen Watkins,1825-1911, Women/AfrAm. 61. Harris, Marjorie Silliman, 1890-1976, Women/Cauc. 62.
http://www.pragmatism.org/dmap/women_minorities.htm
Dictionary of Modern American Philosophers Women and Minorities Note: These figures are also organized by Subject Area Addams, Jane Women/Cauc Anthony, Susan Brownell Women/Cauc Arendt, Hannah Women/Cauc Baier, Annette C. Women/Cauc Baker, Thomas Minority/AfrAm Balch, Emily Greene Women/Cauc Baraka, Amiri (LeRoi Jones) Minority/AfrAm Barnes, Hazel Estella Women/Cauc Beard, Mary R. Women/Cauc Beecher, Catherine Women/Cauc Benedict, Ruth Women/Cauc Blackbird, Andrew J. Minority/NatAm Black Elk Minority/NatAm Blackwell, Antoinette Women/Cauc Blatavasky, Helena Petrovna Women/Cauc Blow, Susan E. Women/Cauc Brackett, Anna Callendar Women/Cauc Bradwell, Myra Women/Cauc Breckinridge, Sophonisba Preston Women/Cauc Brodbeck, May Women/Cauc Bussey, Gertrude C. Women/Cauc Cabot, Ella Lyman Women/Cauc Calkins, Mary Whiton Women/Cauc Carson, Rachel Women/Cauc Cheney, Ednah Dow Women/Cauc Chief Joseph Minority/NatAm Child, Lydia Maria Women/Cauc Cohen, Selma Jeanne Women/Cauc Coolidge, Mary Lowell Women/Cauc Cooper, Anna Julia Women/AfrAm Couzens, Phoebe Women/Cauc Crummell, Alexander

45. Teachers Talk -- Brown Quarterly -- V. 3, No. 3 -- Winter 2000
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (18251911) Frances Ellen Watkins was the best-knownand respected 19th century African American poet and novelist.
http://brownvboard.org/brwnqurt/03-3/03-3f.htm
Book Nook Did You Know?
Volume 3, No. 3 (Winter 2000) Black History Month Issue Teachers Talk How often we teach only about the most well-known figures in history. Using books, the internet and other media center resources, we can help students dig deeper to find new role models with fascinating stories. Thousands of people devoted their lives to ending slavery. Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman and William Lloyd Garrison were not the only leaders. Others made contributions to the crusade. Maria Stewart (1803-1879)
Maria Stewart, a free-born African American woman fired by political and religious zeal, began lecturing and writing pamphlets in 1831. She lectured on abolition, equal rights, colonization, educational opportunities, and racial pride and unity. One of the most radical writers of her time, she advocated black self-determination and independence from whites. Her career as a public speaker was cut short due to strong opposition to women lecturing in public, even from members of the black community. Stewart launched a distinguished career as an educator in New York and eventually opened two schools for free African American children in Washington, D.C. Lydia Maria Child (1802-1880)
Lydia Maria Child was a Massachusetts-born white woman who was an anti-slavery writer and activist. She published essays, articles, letters and novels, and edited

46. Sojourner Truth (ca. 1797-1883) Library Of Congress Citations
Subjects Harper, Frances Ellen (Watkins) 18251911 Technique. Englishlanguage United States Rhetoric. Women orators United States.
http://www.malaspina.edu/~mcneil/cit/citlctruth.htm

Sojourner Truth (ca. 1797-1883)
: Library of Congress Citations
The Little Search Engine that Could
Down to Name Citations National Library of Canada LC Online Catalog ... COPAC Database (UK) Book Citations [34 Records] Author: Bernard, Jacqueline. Title: Journey toward freedom; the story of Sojourner Truth. Edition: [1st ed.] Published: New York, Norton [1967] Description: xiv, 265 p. illus., ports. 24 cm. LC Call No.: E185.97 .T82 Dewey No.: 301.44/93/0924 B 92 Notes: Biography of Sojourner Truth, who was born into slavery, freed in 1827, and became famous for her courage, quick wit, and ready challenge as she campaigned for abolition and women's rights in New York and the Midwestern States. Bibliography: p. [255]-259. Subjects: Truth, Sojourner, d. 1883. Afro-American abolitionists Biography. Abolitionists United States Biography. Social reformers United States Biography. Truth, Sojourner, d. 1883. Control No.: 65011012 /AC/r954 Author: Gilbert, Olive. Title: Narrative of Sojourner Truth. Published: New York, Arno Press, 1968. Description: 320 p. illus., facsims., ports. 21 cm. Series: The American Negro, his history and literature LC Call No.: E185.97 .T882 Dewey No.: 326/.0924 B Notes: Reprint of the 1878 ed. "Book of life [by Frances W. Titus": p. [127]-320. Subjects: Truth, Sojourner, d. 1883. Afro-American abolitionists Biography. Abolitionists United States Biography. Social reformers United States Biography. Other authors: Titus, Frances W. Control No.: 68029021 //r952

47. Discarded Legacy - Politics And Poetics In The Life Of Frances E. W. Harper, 182
and Poetics in the Life of Frances EW Harper, 18251911 Melba Joyce Boyd, Vines andStately Palms The Radical Vision of Frances Ellen Watkins Harper 3. Mosaic
http://wsupress.wayne.edu/africana/afrliterature/boyddl2.htm
Book Information Table of Contents About the Author Discarded Legacy
Politics and Poetics in the Life of Frances E. W. Harper, 1825-1911
Melba Joyce Boyd Acknowledgements; Prelude
Introduction: Discarded Legacy
THE ABOLITIONIST YEARS
1. Orphaned and Exiled
2. 'Neath Sheltering Vines and Stately Palms: The Radical Vision of Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
3. Mosaic Legacy: Frances Harper and the Afroamerican Quest for the Promised Land
PURSUIT OF THE PROMISED LAND
4. The Legacy of the Daughters of Ishmael: To Be Black and Female
5. The Dialectics of Dialect Poetry: Frances Harper's Sketches of Southern Life THE WOMAN'S ERA Iola Leroy, or Shadows Uplifted : A Novel by a Black Nazarene 7. Frances E. W. Harper and the Legacy of Black Feminism 8. Retrieval of a Legacy Notes Bibliography Bibliography: Frances E. W. Harper Index Melba Joyce Boyd is an associate professor in the Department of Africana Studies at Wayne State University and an adjunct professor at the Center for Afoamerican and African Studies at the University of Michigan, where she received her Doctor of Arts degree. She is the author of The Inventory of Black Roses and three other books of poetry.

48. James M. Whitfield's America And Other Poems: Contexts
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (18251911) was one of the most prolific and popularAfrican American writers of the nineteenth century, authoring four novels
http://www.iath.virginia.edu/fdw/volume1/levine/harper.html
Frances Harper's "Bury Me in a Free Land"
Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911) was one of the most prolific and popular African American writers of the nineteenth century, authoring four novels, several widely praised volumes of poems, and a number of essays and short stories. Born in Baltimore to free black parents who died when she was young, Frances Watkins was raised by her uncle William Watkins, a prominent educator and abolitionist. She taught at schools in Ohio and Pennsylvania, and in the early 1850s left teaching to lecture for the Maine Anti-Slavery Society and other antislavery organizations. She married Fenton Harper of Cincinnati, Ohio, in 1860, and after his death four years later she resumed lecturing, supporting the cause of black suffrage and urging blacks to work for their uplift through temperance, education, and economic empowerment. In 1892 she published her best-known work of fiction, Iola Leroy . For most of her life, however, she was best known for her poetry. Prefaced by William Lloyd Garrison and published in 1854, her first volume of poetry, Poems on Miscellaneous Subjects Uncle Tom's Cabin , sold approximately 12,000 copies in its first four years in print and was reprinted at least twenty times during Harper's lifetime. "Bury Me in a Free Land" was written in the late 1850s and published in the 1864

49. Social Service/Activism
Antoinette Louisa Brown (Blackwell), 18251921 (USA); Antoinette BlackwellHome; Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, 1825-1911 (USA MD, OH, PA);
http://www.distinguishedwomen.com/subject/socserv.html
Distinguished Women of Past and Present
First Page
Name Index Subject Index Related Sites ... Search Search: Books Popular Music Classical Music Video Enter keywords...
Social Service/Activism
Born Before 20th Century:

50. Legacy
LEGACY Profile Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, 18251911. Elizabeth Ammons. LEGACYProfile Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, 1825-1911. Elizabeth Ammons.
http://www.lehigh.edu/~dek7/SSAWW/legacyIndSubj.htm
Select letter: A B C D ... Z A AFRICAN AMERICAN WRITERS "Anna Julia Cooper: The Black Feminist Voice of the 1890s." Mary Helen Washington. 4.2 (1987): 3-15. "The Disappearing 'I' in Our Nig ." Jill Jones. 13.1 (1996): 38-53. "Spirit Matters: Re-Possessing the African-American Women's Literary Tradition." Anne Dalke. 12.1 (1995): 1-16. "Is Frances Ellen Watkins Harper Good Enough to Teach?" Paul Lauter. 5.1 (1988): 27-32. "LEGACY Profile: Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, 1825-1911." Elizabeth Ammons. 2.2 (1985): 61-66. "LEGACY Profile: Harriet Ann Jacobs, c. 1813-1897." Jean Fagan Yellin. 5.2 (1988): 55-61. "New Woman, Fallen Woman: The Crisis of Reputation in Turn-of-the-Century Novels by Pauline Hopkins and Edith Wharton." Kristina Brooks. 13.2 (1996): 91-112. " 'There is Might in Each': Conceptions of Self in Harriet Jacob's Incidents in the Life of a
Slave Girl, Written by Herself

51. SSSL: Bibliography: Legacy Profile: Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911) (El
Legacy Profile Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (18251911) Legacy , 2 (Fall1985), 61-66. Subject Frances EW Harper Author(s) Elizabeth Ammons.
http://www.missq.msstate.edu/sssl/view.php?pid=241

52. SSSL: Bibliography: Writers: Frances E. W. Harper
Entries (15 total), Showing entries 115 of 15 (Page 1 of 1). Legacy ProfileFrances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911) , Elizabeth Ammons (1985);
http://www.missq.msstate.edu/sssl/view.php?wid=44

53. NcpmAuthors06
Harland, Marion, 18301922. Harper, Frances Ellen Watkins, 1825-1911.Harris, Samuel, 1814-1899. Harris, William Logan, bp., 1817-1887.
http://memory.loc.gov/ammem/ndlpcoop/moahtml/ncpmAuthors06.html
PREV NEXT INDEX NEW SEARCH ... The Nineteenth Century in Print: Books
Authors
Galesburg (Ill.) Ordinances, etc.
Gardiner, James T. (James Terry), 1842-1912.

Gardner, Eugene Clarence, 1836-1915.

Garland, Hamlin, 1860-1940.
... NEW SEARCH

54. Classic African American Women's Narratives (in MARION)
Life and religious experience of Jarena Lee. Truth, Sojourner, d. 1883. Harper,Frances Ellen Watkins, 18251911. Wilson, Harriet E., 1808-ca. 1870.
http://catalog.evanston.lib.il.us/MARION/acu0227
Classic African American women's narratives
Title:
  • Classic African American women's narratives / edited by William L. Andrews.
Author:
  • Andrews, William L., 1946-
  • Stewart, Maria W., 1803-1879.
  • Lee, Jarena, b. 1783. Life and religious experience of Jarena Lee.
  • Truth, Sojourner, d. 1883.
  • Harper, Frances Ellen Watkins, 1825-1911.
  • Wilson, Harriet E., 1808-ca. 1870.
  • Jacobs, Harriet A. (Harriet Ann), 1813-1897. Incidents
  • Forten, Charlotte L.
Published:
  • New York : Oxford University Press, c2003.
Subject:
  • American prose literature African American authors.
  • American prose literature Women authors.
  • African American women Biography.
  • Autobiographies United States.
  • Autobiographies Women authors.
  • Narration (Rhetoric)
Material:
  • xl, 391 p.
Note:
  • Includes bibliographical references (p. xxxviii-xxxix).
  • Religion and the pure principles of morality, the sure foundation on which we must build / Maria W. Stewart (1831) The life and religious experience of Jarena Lee, a coloured lady, giving an account of her call to preach the Gospel / Jarena Lee (1836) Narrative of Sojourner Truth, a Northern slave / Sojourner Truth (1850) The two offers / Frances Ellen Watkins Herper (1859) Our Nig: or, Sketches from the life of a free black, in a two-story white house, North / Harriet E. Wilson (1859) Inccidents in the life of a slave girl / Harriet A. Jacobs (1861) Life on the Sea Islands / Charlotte L. Forten (1864).
LC Card no:
  • ISBN:
    • 0195141350 : PAP
    System ID no:
    • ACU-0227
    Holdings:
  • 55. Minnie's Sacrifice ; Sowing And Reaping ; Trial And Triumph (in MARION)
    Author Harper, Frances Ellen Watkins, 18251911. Foster, Frances Smith. PublishedBoston Beacon Press, c1994. Subject African Americans Fiction.
    http://catalog.evanston.lib.il.us/MARION/ABU-8038
    Minnie's sacrifice ; Sowing and reaping ; Trial and triumph
    Title:
    • Minnie's sacrifice ; Sowing and reaping ; Trial and triumph : three rediscovered novels / by Frances E.W. Harper ; edited by Frances Smith Foster.
    Author:
    • Harper, Frances Ellen Watkins, 1825-1911.
    • Foster, Frances Smith.
    Published:
    • Boston : Beacon Press, c1994.
    Subject:
    • African Americans Fiction.
    Series:
    • Black women writers series
    Other titles:
    • Sowing and reaping.
    • Trial and triumph.
    Material:
    • xliii, 286 p. ; 20 cm.
    Note:
    • Includes bibliographical references.
    LC Card no:
  • ISBN:
  • Other ID no:
    • dbsrvr::lcmarc/ARP-2622/MERCHAN
    System ID no:
    • ABU-8038
    Holdings:
    Floor 2 - Fiction
    • CALL NUMBER: Fiction Harpe.F Adult Book Available
  • If you have a valid library card, you may place a hold on this title for pickup at the library. Results from the Evanston Public Library catalog.
    Start another search
    Top New Search Information About Your Library Account ... Evanston Information Server Please send comments, suggestions, or bug reports to the webmaster

    56. The Woman Question Reconsidered
    In contrast, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (18251911), a Northern black orator andwriter for the abolition movement, praises a suitable match where interests
    http://deptorg.knox.edu/engdept/commonroom/Volume_Four/number_two/madams/
    page 1 of 8 The Woman Question Reconsidered: Gender, Race, and Class in the Work of Kate Chopin and Frances Harper Melissa Adams
    Click here for a

    Printable Version
    page 1 of 8 home volume 4, number 1
    editorial staff
    f. a. q ... submission criteria

    57. Project Gutenberg S Trial And Triumph, By Frances Ellen Watkins
    Transcriber s Note About the Author Francis Ellen Watkins Harper (18251911) wasborn to AND TRIUMPH A Rediscovered Novel by Frances EW Harper Edited by
    http://www.gutenberg.net/1/1/0/5/11056/11056.txt

    58. Ypg2.html
    Cary (1820 1871) Phoebe Cary (1824 - 1871) Lucy Larcom (1824 - 1893) AdelineDT Whitney (1824 - 1906) Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911) Rose Terry
    http://www-personal.umich.edu/~jeson/ypg2.html
    I n her essay, "From Cult to Profession, Domestic Women in Search of Equality," Cheryl Robertson highlights what women in 1840 (just before DeLamarter was born) were most likely to want for themselves and what others expected of them by quoting a 19th century author, Sarah Lewis:
    "The chief object of their [women's] education is not so much to fit them to adorn society, as to vivify and enlighten a home. What a paradise even this world might become, if one half of the amount of effort expended in vain attempts to excite the admiration of strangers, were reversed to vary the amusements and adorn the sacred precincts of the home! . . . There are, morally speaking, no small duties. Nothing that influences human virtue and happiness can be really trifling, and what more influences them than the despised, because limited, duties assigned to women? . . . It is true, her reward (her task being done) is not of this world."
    These were probably the ideals that Mary B. DeLamarter was raised to accept - yet they were also the beliefs that women of her era began to reject. Though it is impossible to pinpoint DeLamarter's own beliefs, her life and her writings seem to place her somewhat in between those two extremes. DeLamarter was a wife, a mother, and a Christian, but she was also a literary lady - which seems to have occupied much of her passions and time. While it is somewhat easy to imagine the role of housewife, mother, and in extreme cases, servant of the house, it is more difficult to imagine the life of a fully committed poet of the late 1800's. Some of these women, women who most likely influenced DeLamarter and her poetry are:

    59. The Online Gateway To The Black World, Featuring News And
    Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (18251911). Raised in a free black family in Maryland,Harper grew up reading the Bible as well as studying Greek and Latin.
    http://www.africana.com/specials/packages/moments/page2_3.asp
    magnum('heritage') Home Research Center / Search Channels Blackworld Lifestyle Movies and TV Music ... Health and Beauty Services Africana Box Office Radio Africana Political Action Center Open Source ... TalkBack Browse Africana Home Research Center Channels: Blackworld Heritage Lifestyle Movies and TV Music Books People Arts Funstuff Health and Beauty Services: Africana Box Office Radio Africana Political Action Center Open Source Talk Back Welcome Guest Sign In Register Home Heritage > Moments to Remember, Series III Moments to Remember, Series III
    Page 2 of 3
    Frances Ellen Watkins Harper
    Bill Pickett Zora Neale Hurston William H. Carney ... Series IV
    Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (1825-1911) Raised in a free black family in Maryland, Harper grew up reading the Bible as well as studying Greek and Latin. When her short story "Two Offers" appeared in the Anglo-African magazine in 1859, it was the first such publication by an African American woman.
    Listen!

    60. Publications Of Margaret Hope Bacon
    Millersville, Pa. Pennsylvania Historical Association, 1987. One greatbundle of humanity Frances Ellen Watkins Harper (18251911) 1989.
    http://www.pendlehill.org/pamphlets/Bacon.html
    Pendle Hill Pamphlets
    Publications Subscribe Home
    Publications of Margaret Hope Bacon
  • History of the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery,
    the Relief of Negroes Unlawfully Held in Bondage, and for Improving the Condition of the African Race
    Philadelphia : Pennsylvania Abolition Society, 1959.
  • The quiet rebels : the story of the Quakers in America
    New York : Basic Books, 1969
  • Lamb's warrior : the life of Isaac T. Hopper
    New York : Thomas Y. Crowell Co., 1970
  • I speak for my slave sister: the life of Abby Kelley Foster.
    New York, Crowell 1974
  • Rebellion at Christiana
    New York : Crown Publishers, 1975
  • The Quaker struggle for the rights of women
    Philadelphia : American Friends Service Committee ; 1977
  • As the way opens : the story of Quaker women in America
    Richmond, Ind. : Friends United Press, 1980.
  • Mott, Lucretia, 1793-1880.
    Lucretia Mott speaking

    Wallingford, Pa. : Pendle Hill, 1980
  • Belief into action, action into belief religious and political aspects of effective peacemaking Philadelphia : Wider Quaker Fellowship, 1985.
  • A  B  C  D  E  F  G  H  I  J  K  L  M  N  O  P  Q  R  S  T  U  V  W  X  Y  Z  

    Page 3     41-60 of 94    Back | 1  | 2  | 3  | 4  | 5  | Next 20

    free hit counter