Notes from a Colored Girl: The Civil War Pocket Diaries of Emilie Frances Davis

Notes from a Colored Girl: The Civil War Pocket Diaries of Emilie Frances Davis

by Karsonya Wise Whitehead
Notes from a Colored Girl: The Civil War Pocket Diaries of Emilie Frances Davis

Notes from a Colored Girl: The Civil War Pocket Diaries of Emilie Frances Davis

by Karsonya Wise Whitehead

eBook

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Overview

This historical biography provides a scholarly analysis of the personal diaries of a young, freeborn mulatto woman during the Civil War years.

In Notes from a Colored Girl, Karsonya Wise Whitehead examines the life and experiences of Emilie Frances Davis through a close reading of three pocket diaries she kept from 1863 to 1865. Whitehead explores Davis’s worldviews and politics, her perceptions of both public and private events, her personal relationships, and her place in Philadelphia’s free black community in the nineteenth century. The book also includes a six-chapter historical reconstruction of Davis’s life.

While Davis’s entries provide brief, daily snapshots of her life, Whitehead interprets them in ways that illuminate nineteenth-century black American women’s experiences. Whitehead’s contribution of edited text and original narrative fills a void in scholarly documentation of women who dwelled in spaces between white elites, black entrepreneurs, and urban dwellers of every race and class.

Drawing on scholarly traditions from history, literature, feminist studies, and sociolinguistics, Whitehead investigates Davis’s diary both as a complete literary artifact and in terms of her specific daily entries. With few primary sources written by black women during this time in history, Davis’s diary is a rare and extraordinarily valuable historical artifact.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611173536
Publisher: University of South Carolina Press
Publication date: 04/13/2022
Series: Women's Diaries and Letters of the South
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 277
File size: 2 MB
Age Range: 18 Years

About the Author

Karsonya Wise Whitehead is an assistant professor of communication and African and African American studies in the Department of Communication at Loyola University Maryland, an award-winning master teacher and curriculum writer in African American history, and a three-time New York Emmy-nominated documentary filmmaker. She lives in Baltimore, Maryland, with her family.

What People are Saying About This

Karol K. Weaver

Readers of Whitehead's volume will be pleased with the text; moreover, scholars will be inspired to pursue new research projects thanks to Whitehead's excellent transcription, outstanding contextualization, and generous observations.

Emma Lapsansky-Werner

This is a remarkable glimpse into the head of a Civil War-era African American woman. Emilie Davis's perspective shows her full consciousness of her role as a privileged urbanite. Whitehead's insightful historical/literary contextualization of Davis's journal makes this an invaluable contribution to our understanding of nineteenth-century communities.

Choice (R. Ray

Providing a coherent, cogent record of 19th-century life, this volume moves a woman of color from obscurity to significance.

William Jelani Cobb

With Notes from a Colored Girl Karsonya Whitehead has painstakingly rendered the obscure visible and shed light on a singular figure whose life is a stand-in for millions of unknown stories. This is history at its most democratic and scholarship at its most vital.

Kate Clifford Larson

Notes from a Colored Girl is a beautiful testament to the personal life of a single free black woman, superbly reconstructed within the social, political, and religious life of free people of color in Civil War Philadelphia. Karsonya Wise Whitehead's meticulous attention to detail brings Emilie Francis Davis - a literate woman participating in and shaping the spaces of a free society near the contested borders of slavery - and her personal writings to life. Emilie's diary is an enduring legacy of the mundane and the extraordinary, carrying us through everyday moments of joy and tragedy, of sewing, socializing, church and school, all within the larger contextual landscape of a nation in upheaval and a community undergoing change. Whitehead treats us with a rare glimpse into a spirited and articulate single woman's interior world, revealing how she navigated the worlds of work, friendships, religion, family, politics, and community. A great addition to interdisciplinary studies, Notes from a Colored Girl is perfect for exploring the historic contours of race, gender, faith, freedom and community in the nation's most vibrant biracial city of the age.

Henry Louis Gates

'To day has bin a memorable day. I thank God I have bin here to see it.' So begins the pocket diaries of free black woman Emilie Davis of Philadelphia on the day of Emancipation at the midpoint of the Civil War. Her words also capture my feelings in seeing Davis's diaries published under the expert eye of Karsonya Wise Whitehead, whose scholarly annotations not only set the scene but reveal how this 'everyday' domestic-dressmaker's decision to record her thoughts at the critical hours of the African American journey was itself an emancipatory act.

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