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Claiming Freedom: Race, Kinship, and Land in Nineteenth-Century Georgia: Page 163 →About the Author

Claiming Freedom: Race, Kinship, and Land in Nineteenth-Century Georgia
Page 163 →About the Author
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table of contents
  1. Cover Page
  2. Title Page
  3. Copyright Page
  4. Dedication
  5. Contents
  6. List of Illustrations
  7. Acknowledgments
  8. Introduction: Claiming Freedom in the Lowcountry
  9. 1: The Slave’s Dream
    1. The Hurt of this Hurt World
    2. The Illusion of Isolation
    3. Memory and (DIS)Remembering
  10. 2: War and Freedom
    1. Marginal Spaces of Freedom
    2. Gender, War, and Freedom
    3. Less than Forty Acres
    4. The Ogeechee Troubles
  11. 3: “Full and Fair Compensation”
    1. Free Labor Ideology and Liminal Spaces of Freedom
    2. Women of Freedom
    3. Claiming Freedom for Themselves
  12. 4: The State of Freedom is the State of Self-Reliance
    1. Kinship and Land in the Lowcountry
    2. Landownership and Women’s Community Networks
    3. The Town of Burroughs
  13. Conclusion
  14. Appendix
  15. Notes
  16. Bibliography
  17. Index

Page 163 →About the Author

Karen Cook Bell is an associate professor of history at Bowie State University. She received a Ph.D. in history from Howard University. Her scholarship has appeared in the Journal of African American History, Georgia Historical Quarterly, Passport, The United States and West Africa: Interaction and Relations, Before Obama: A Reappraisal of Black Reconstruction Era Politicians, Converging Identities: Blackness in the Contemporary Diaspora, and Slavery and Freedom in Savannah. Bell is a former American Association of University Women Dissertation Fellow.

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