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  1. MORE ANNA JULIA COOPER RESOURCES . READ Anna Julia Cooper’s A VOICE FROM THE SOUTH (1892) EXPLORE Howard University’s ANNA JULIA COOPER DIGITAL PROJECT. READ about Cooper at her alma mater, COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY . READ about Cooper from the NATIONAL PARK SERVICE. READ Anna Julia Cooper’s Doctoral Dissertation L'Attitude De La France A L ...

  2. ANNA JULIA COOPER. Born in 1858 in North Carolina to her enslaved mother, Hannah Stanley Haywood, and her white slaveholder, Anna Julia Cooper spent her lifetime of over a century redefining the limitations and opportunities for women of color in a society set up for their disempowerment and subjugation. A distinguished scholar and educator ...

  3. 27 de jul. de 2022 · Anna Julia Cooper é considerada a "mãe do feminismo negro" por muitos pesquisadores. Considerando tamanha importância, nós ouvimos e lemos pouco no Brasil sobre seu trabalho. Cooper vivenciou a escravidão, a sujeição sexual de sua mãe, testemunhou o horror da Guerra Civil, celebrou a abolição da escravatura e, com desgosto, viu a cisão no movimento de mulheres em razão da questão ...

  4. 3. Anna Julia Cooper Ao refletir especificamente sobre a mulher negra, Cooper evidenciou especificidades desse grupo social. Os conteúdos trabalhados são: o seu pioneirismo no feminismo negro; o legado da escravidão na produção de hierarquias; o olhar simultâneo para a questão racial e de gênero; a emancipação das mulheres pela ...

  5. Anna Julia Cooper (1858 – 1964) was a visionary black feminist leader, educator, and activist. Born into slavery in 1858, she became the fourth African American woman to earn a doctoral degree when she received her Ph.D. in history. She is considered by many scholars to be the “Mother of Black Feminism”. This is Her Story.

  6. 25 de out. de 2023 · Born into slavery in Raleigh, North Carolina, on August 10, 1858, Anna Julia Haywood Cooper was the youngest of three children born to Hannah Stanley Haywood and presumably her enslaver, George Washington Haywood. In 1867, Cooper entered the first class of Raleigh’s St. Augustine’s Normal and Collegiate Institute, where she went on to be a ...

  7. Anna Julia Cooper was an educator, author, activist and one of the most prominent African American scholars in United States history. She gave voice to the African-American community during the 19th and 20th centuries, from the end of slavery to the beginning of the Civil Rights Movement. Cooper—who once described her vocation as “the ...