Community and Critique

The Rhetorical Activism of Black American Women's Memory Work

by Sara C. Vanderhaagen

How Black American women have uplifted Black communities and critiqued dominant white memories


In Community and Critique, Sara C. VanderHaagen analyzes Black women's memory work, a deliberate, public effort to create, preserve, revise, and circulate accounts of the past to strengthen community bonds and effect change. VanderHaagen draws from the resources of rhetorical studies, public memory studies, and Black feminism to examine key examples of Black women's memory work during the critical historical period between Reconstruction and the Harlem Renaissance. These instances include public addresses about exemplary women, speeches given at the 1893 World's Congress of Representative Women, the 1923 campaign against the "Black Mammy" monument that was proposed for creation in Washington, DC, and the 1926 biography collection, Homespun Heroines and Other Women of Distinction. Responding to a call by Black feminist scholars to move beyond recovery toward deeper engagement with Black women's intellectual and rhetorical work, Community and Critique centers the memory work of Black American women to demonstrate the significant, if underexamined, role that they played in shaping our shared past.

Table of Contents

Metadata

  • container title
    Community and Critique: The Rhetorical Activism of Black American Women's Memory Work
  • isbn
    978-1-64336-613-5
  • publisher
    University of South Carolina Press
  • publisher place
    Columbia, SC
  • restrictions
    The text of this book is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial No Derivatives 4.0. International (CC BY- NC- ND 4.0) license: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
  • rights

    © 2025 by University of South Carolina


    The inclusion of this book in the Open Carolina collection is made possible by the generous funding of the University of South Carolina Libraries.

  • rights holder
    University of South Carolina
  • series title
    Movement Rhetoric / Rhetoric's Movements
  • doi