Civil War and Emancipation Studies at Temple presents:
Race and Gender in the Era of Emancipation
Saturday February 10, Walk Auditorium, Ritter Annex, Temple Main Campus
8:30 am-9:30 registration and coffee
9:30-11:00: Representations of Race and Womanhood in the Antebellum Period
Chair: Richard Newman, Rochester Institute of Technology
Papers: Erica Armstrong Dunbar, “Friendship Albums: The Private Lives of African-American Women before the Civil War”
Sarah Roth, “The Elusive Patty Cannon”
11:00-11:15 break
11:15-12:45: Engendering Emancipation in the Wartime North
Chair: Nathaniel Norment Jr., Chair, African American Studies Department, Temple
Papers: Matthew Gallman, “The Abolitionist as Stump Speaker: Anna Dickinson’s Civil Wars”
Carla L. Peterson, “’A Home Found’? Harriet Jacobs in New York City”
12:45-1:45 lunch
1:45-4:00: Contesting the Meanings of Freedom during Reconstruction
Chair: Bettye Collier-Thomas, History Department, Temple University
Papers: Jim Downs, “’Unfit for Freedom’: Representations of Freedwomen as Violent, Deranged, and Destitute After the Civil War”
Mia Bay, “’The Battle for Womanhood is the Battle for Race’: Black Women and Racial Thought in the Post-Emancipation Era”
Margaret Bacon, “’The Double Curse of Sex and Color’: Robert Purvis and Human Rights”
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The Diamond Club, Mitten Hall, Temple Main Campus
5:00-6:00 Reception
6:00-7:00 Dinner
7:00-8:00 Keynote Address by Catherine Clinton: “’Slavery is War’: Harriet Tubman and the Civil War”
8:00 farewells