Amrita Chakrabarti Myers's Forging Freedom

696 Words2 Pages

Myers, A. (2011). Forging freedom Black women and the pursuit of liberty in antebellum Charleston. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press. Amrita Chakrabarti Myers examines the lives of freed black women in Charleston, South Carolina during the period of 1790-1861 in her book, Forging Freedom. Myers presents her extensive research on the trials that plagued free black women’s liberty in Charleston in three parts containing six chapters. The first part of the book, Glimpsing Freedom, opens with a detailed description of Charleston, South Carolina. Myers describes Charleston as the City of Contrasts, relating to the blatant contrast between wealth and poverty that existed. Myers examines how white greed created an environment with …show more content…

Myers looks at the racial and gendered structure that persisted in Charleston and its effects on free black women’s job opportunities. While black women’s labor was extremely depended upon, women had significantly less jobs to choose from than whites and free black men. The fourth chapter looks at “The Currency of Citizenship” in Charleston for free black women, especially as it pertained to property ownership. Myers looks at black women’s ability and decisions to purchase real estate in Charleston. Myers looks at the decision by women to purchase enslaved laborers versus purchasing property. Myers describes how property became a signal of wealth and social advancement within the culture of Charleston. Owning property was very important to the free black women and also provided them with something to leave to their children. The fifth chapter is a case-study of Cecille Cogdell and Sarah Sanders. Myers examines how Cecille’s position as a middle-class white women affected her life, and the lives of her children. Myers then looks at Sarah Sanders, who had sexual relations with Cecille’s husband when she was just 16 impacted her life, and the extreme impact it had on their 10 children. This glimpse into the lives of these two women illustrate the importance and impact of a women’s alliance with a prominent white man in antebellum …show more content…

Myers examines black women’s activeness in bettering their lives and the lives of their families. She looks at the different methods Margaret took as well as the impact they had on the lives of her daughters, specifically Barbara. Barbara benefited through her mother’s relationships by obtaining an education and inheritance. Given the lack of primary source documents regarding women in Charleston during this time period, Myers is required to delve deep into other sources for information. Myers uses court records, family papers, legislative documents, probate data, parish registers, census materials, tax lists, death certificates, legal files, etc. to establish a viewpoint on the lives of women in Charleston (Myers, p. 7). She does a fantastic job compiling all this source information into a logical and well organized monograph on free black women’s lives in Charleston. Myers also makes use of comparisons to illustrate free black women’s lives. She makes comparisons with: white women, white men, black men, as well as black women outside of Charleston in places such as Baltimore and Savannah. In doing so she provides an explicit view of similarities and differences between the races and genders in these

Open Document