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- Title
Pickets, Protests and Purses in the American Civil Rights Movement.
- Authors
Casey, Kathleen B.
- Abstract
At first glance, perhaps nothing seems more mundane and apolitical than a purse. But purses have always been much more than a fashion accessory. This article analyses how southern Black women – both the legendary and the lesser known – in the 'classical' phase of the Civil Rights Movement used purses to appear as respectable ladies' when their dress and comportment were under close surveillance. Yet they simultaneously used their purses as private, female‐controlled spaces that aided them in achieving a wide variety of social, economic and political objectives. In fact, many southern Black women used their purses to hide critical items needed to prepare themselves and protect their bodies as they voted, sat‐in, rode on public transportation and integrated schools. Using oral histories, memoirs, newspaper and magazine stories and photographs, this article argues that Black southern female activists used purses primarily as 'toolkits'. In the process, it reveals that Black southern women's participation in the armed self‐defence movement is far more significant than scholars have appreciated.
- Subjects
AMERICAN civil rights movement; HANDBAGS; BLACK women; AFRICAN American women; CIVIL rights workers; SYMBOLIC aspects of clothing &; dress; FASHION accessories; SELF-defense; PUBLIC demonstrations
- Publication
Gender & History, 2023, Vol 35, Issue 3, p1070
- ISSN
0953-5233
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/1468-0424.12611