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  1. Apenas uma mulher, Anna Julia Cooper, foi autorizada a participar do comitê executivo da conferência. Desde então, questões que impulsionavam o debate sobre gênero foram desarticuladas e minimizadas sob a justificativa de que tais questões não se relacionavam ao pan-africanismo ou não eram tão urgentes para a emancipação e autoafirmação dos povos negros.

  2. 31 de mar. de 2015 · 1. Situating Cooper: Context for Cooper’s Two Best-Known Writings. Anna Julia Cooper’s best-known written work, A Voice from the South by a Black Woman of the South, was published in 1892.This collection of essays and speeches, described by Mary Helen Washington as an “unparalleled articulation of black feminist thought” and by Beverley Guy-Sheftall as the first book length Black ...

  3. Anna Julia Haywood Cooper (1858-1964) was a writer, teacher, and activist who championed education for African Americans and women. Born into bondage in 1858 in Raleigh, North Carolina, Anna Haywood married George A.G. Cooper, a teacher of theology at Saint Augustine’s, in 1877. When her husband died two years later, Cooper decided to pursue ...

  4. 12 de mar. de 2015 · Anna Julia Cooper changed America. Cooper was one of the first black women in the country to earn a Ph.D. Before that, she headed the first public high school for black students in the District of ...

  5. Anna Julia Cooper dedicated her life to writing, teaching, and activism, with a strong emphasis on advocating for the education of Black people, especially Black women. In addition to her dedication to education, she excelled as a public intellectual, social theorist, cultural critic, essayist, poet, and reformer

  6. February 27, 1964. Place of Burial: Raleigh. Cemetery Name: City Cemetery. Before Kimberle Crenshaw (1989) coined the term intersectionality and the Combahee River Collective released their 1977 statement, there was Dr. Anna Julia Haywood Cooper. Born into slavery in 1859, Cooper would become a distinguished author, activist, educator, and scholar.

  7. 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 ...