My standard talk, this one given at the Woodstock Public Library on March 25, can be seen here
You can book me for lectures through my website.
My standard talk, this one given at the Woodstock Public Library on March 25, can be seen here
You can book me for lectures through my website.
My talk on Ernestine Rose, cancelled because of Tuesday's snowstorm, will now be on WEDNESDAY, APRIL 19 in Room 9206 at the Graduate Center, 365 Fifth Avenue, between 34th and 35th Streets at 6:30 p.m..
Some books will be available for sale and if you bring a copy of course I will autograph it. Books can be ordered from my website, bonnieanderson.com.
I also got a nice review from the Jewish Independent in Vancouver. You can read it here
I'll be speaking this Saturday at the Woodstock Public Library. Here's the link
Because of the impending blizzard, the Graduate Center will be closed tomorrow. I will post the new date as soon as I receive it.
My blog about Ernestine Rose and the January 21st Women's March is now up at the OUP History blog -- just scroll down a little bit -- it's the first one and you can read it here
Wonderful news! Time Magazine just reposted my HNN piece on Ernestine Rose on their home page. You can read it here.
The blog I wrote about The Rabbi's Atheist Daughter is now live on History Network News -- HNN. You can read it here .
In 1898, six years after Ernestine Rose died, the black activist Mary Church Terrell (1863-1954) addressed the 50th anniversary meeting of the National American Women's Suffrage Association. "Fifty years ago a meeting such as this, planned, conducted and addressed by women would have been an impossibility," she declared. "Less than forty years ago, few sane men would have predicted that either a slave or one of his descendants [both her parents had been enslaved] would in the century at least address such an audience in the Nation's Capital at the invitation of women representing the highest, broadest, best type of womanhood, that can be found anywhere in the world." This to me, she continued, "is a double jubilee, rejoicing as I do, not only in the prospect of enfranchisement of my sex [US women could not vote until 1920] but in the emancipation of my race. When ERNESTINE ROSE, Lucretia Mott, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Lucy Stone and Susan B. Anthony" began this movement, it was still "forbidden to teach slaves to read and not only could they not own property, but even their bodies were not their own." Church Terrell, among many other achievements, was one of the founders of the NAACP.
Although Rose became forgotten by the 1920s, Terrell's speech is proof that she was still honored at the end of the nineteenth century. Today, we would do well to remember the battles of this feminist pioneer, who fought for abolition as well as free thought. Although the world was against her, she never gave up.