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" Pauli Murray & Caroline Ware : "
edited by Anne Firor Scott
Document Type
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BL
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Record Number
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635706
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Doc. No
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dltt
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Main Entry
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Murray, Pauli,1910-1985
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Title & Author
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Pauli Murray Caroline Ware : : forty years of letters in black and white /\ edited by Anne Firor Scott
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Publication Statement
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Chapel Hill :: University of North Carolina Press,, c2006
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Series Statement
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Gender & American culture
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Page. NO
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xiii, 194 p., [6] p. of plates :: ill. ;; 23 cm
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ISBN
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0807830550 (cloth : alk. paper)
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: 9780807830550
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Bibliographies/Indexes
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Includes bibliographical references and index
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Contents
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Introduction -- The correspondence begins -- The Cold War, Mccarthyism, and civil rights -- Family history, global history -- Ghana, Unesco, and beyond -- Writing, editing, and Brandeis -- The last phase
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Abstract
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"In the fall of 1942 a young black law student at Howard University visited a class in constitutional law taught by one of the nation's leading historians: so began the decades-long friendship between Pauli Murray, the student, and Caroline Ware, the historian. This collection of their letters begins in 1943 and continues (with few interruptions) until Murray's death in 1985. The correspondence illuminates a significant period in what is now labeled the "long civil rights movement" as well as the early days of second wave feminism. Ware (1899-1990) was a Boston Brahmin, an accomplished social historian, a consumer advocate, and a community development specialist who worked in Asia and virtually every Latin American country. Among Ware's other activities, she edited the final volume of UNESCO's History of Mankind. Murray (1910-1985), raised in North Carolina, became a labor lawyer, a teacher, and a lifelong political and social activist. As a writer, she is best known for her family memoir Proud Shoes and her epic poem Dark Testament. Murray also was the first African American woman ordained an Episcopal priest. "The wide-ranging topics of their correspondence include civil rights, electoral politics, the labor movement, the debate about the Fair Employment Practices Committee, McCarthyism, feminism, and the National Organization for Women (of which both were founding members), as well as personal and private concerns. Their words capture the unguarded thoughts and reactions of two highly intelligent women - one white, one black: one a northerner, one a southerner - both dedicated to the cause of human rights. In the process, the letters paint compelling self-portraits."--BOOK JACKET
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Subject
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Murray, Pauli,1910-1985
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Ware, Caroline F., (Caroline Farrar),1899-1990
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Subject
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Women social reformers-- United States, Correspondence
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Subject
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Women college teachers-- United States, Correspondence
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Subject
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African American women civil rights workers, Correspondence
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Subject
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Women historians-- United States, Correspondence
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Subject
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Feminists-- United States, Correspondence
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Subject
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Women intellectuals-- United States, Correspondence
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Dewey Classification
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305.42092/273
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LC Classification
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HQ1412.A87 2006
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Added Entry
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Ware, Caroline F., (Caroline Farrar),1899-1990
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Scott, Anne Firor,1921-2019
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Parallel Title
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Pauli Murray and Caroline Ware
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: Forty years of letters in black and white
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