Surprise Castle
/Books/Biographies & Autobiographies/History/Women
Madam C. J. Walker: The Making of an American Icon

Madam C. J. Walker: The Making of an American Icon - Hardcover

$38.99
$39.00
Quantity
01

Pay over time for orders over $35.00 with

Availability:In StockContributor:Erica L. BallSeries:Library of African American BiographyPublish date:2021-01-29Pages:166
Language:EnglishPublisher:Rowman & Littlefield PublishersISBN-13:9781442260382ISBN-10:1442260386UPC:9781442260382Book Category:History, Biography & AutobiographyBook Subcategory:African American & Black, Political, WomenSize:9.00 x 6.00 x 0.50 inchesWeight:0.9105Product ID:SCAK8AX4WB

"[An] exhaustively detailed account of the life of Madam C.J. Walker." Booklist, Starred Review

Madam C. J. Walker--reputed to be America's first self-made woman millionaire--has long been celebrated for her rags-to-riches story. Born to former slaves in the Louisiana Delta in the aftermath of the Civil War, married at fourteen, and widowed at twenty, Walker spent the first decades of her life as a laundress, laboring in conditions that paralleled the lives of countless poor and working-class African American women. By the time of her death in 1919, however, Walker had refashioned herself into one of the most famous African American figures in the nation: the owner and president of a hair-care empire and a philanthropist wealthy enough to own a country estate near the Rockefellers in the prestigious New York town of Irvington-on-Hudson. In this biography, Erica Ball places this remarkable and largely forgotten life story in the context of Walker's times. Ball analyzes Walker's remarkable acts of self-fashioning, and explores the ways that Walker (and the Walker brand) enabled a new generation of African Americans to bridge the gap between a nineteenth-century agrarian past and a twentieth-century future as urban-dwelling consumers.

Language:EnglishPublisher:Rowman & Littlefield PublishersISBN-13:9781442260382ISBN-10:1442260386UPC:9781442260382Book Category:History, Biography & AutobiographyBook Subcategory:African American & Black, Political, WomenSize:9.00 x 6.00 x 0.50 inchesWeight:0.9105Product ID:SCAK8AX4WB

Erica L. Ball is a professor of History and Black Studies at Occidental College. Ball is the author of To Live an Antislavery Life: Personal Politics and the Antebellum Black Middle Class (2012). She is co-editor, with Kellie Carter Jackson, of Reconsidering Roots: Race, Politics, and Memory (2017) and co-editor, with Tatiana Seijas and Terri L. Snyder, of As If She Were Free: A Collective Biography of Women and Emancipations in the Americas (2020).


Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield Publishers

Contributor(s)

Erica L. Ball

Free shipping on orders over $75. Standard shipping takes 3-7 business days. Returns accepted within 30 days of purchase.

Recently Viewed

View All