Books by Elizabeth Hayes Turner
University of North Texas : History : Elizabeth Hayes Turner
Texas Women: Their Histories, Their Lives (Southern Women: Their Lives and Times Ser.)
Author(s): Stephanie Cole, Rebecca Sharpless, Elizabeth Turner
Publication date: 2015-01-15
ISBN: 0820347205, ISBN-13: 9780820347202
Texas Women: Their Histories, Their Lives engages current scholarship on women in Texas, the South, and the United States. It provides insights into Texas’s singular geographic position, bordering on the West and sharing a unique history with Mexico, while analyzing the ways in which Texas stories mirror a larger American narrative. The biographies and essays illustrate an uncommon diversity among Texas women, reflecting experiences ranging from those of dispossessed enslaved women to wealthy patrons of the arts. That history also captures the ways in which women’s lives reflect both personal autonomy and opportunities to engage in the public sphere. From the vast spaces of northern New Spain and the rural counties of antebellum Texas to the growing urban centers in the post–Civil War era, women balanced traditional gender and racial prescriptions with reform activism, educational enterprise, and economic development.
Contributors to Texas Women address major questions in women’s history, demonstrating how national and regional themes in the scholarship on women are answered or reconceived in Texas. Texas women negotiated significant boundaries raised by gender, race, and class. The writers address the fluid nature of the border with Mexico, the growing importance of federal policies, and the eventual reforms engendered by the civil rights movement. From Apaches to astronauts, from pioneers to professionals, from rodeo riders to entrepreneurs, and from Civil War survivors to civil rights activists, the subjects of Texas Women offer important contributions to Texas history, women’s history, and the history of the nation.
Major Problems in the History of the American South, Volume 2 (Major Problems in American History Series)
Author(s): Sally G. McMillen, Elizabeth Hayes Turner, Paul Escott, David Goldfield
Publication date: 2011-08-11
ISBN: 0547228333, ISBN-13: 9780547228334
Major Problems in the History of the American South, Volume 1 (Major Problems in American History Series)
Author(s): Sally G. McMillen, Elizabeth Hayes Turner, Paul Escott, David Goldfield
Publication date: 2011-05-27
ISBN: 0547228317, ISBN-13: 9780547228310
Women and Gender in the New South: 1865 - 1945
Author(s): Elizabeth Hayes Turner
Publication date: 2008-12-16
ISBN: 088295265X, ISBN-13: 9780882952659
In every age and in every culture there have been women who challenged the prevailing gender prescriptions and struck a nerve, resulting in waves of either change or repression. In Women and Gender in the New South, Elizabeth Hayes Turner draws on a multiplicity of sources—part of the great outpouring of works in the field of women’s history that has emerged in the past 40 years—to bring together in one volume the history of conservative, moderate, and even radical women’s groups. The book demonstrates how women and men from different racial and economic backgrounds not only weathered but also shaped the political and cultural landscape of the New South. Employing women's history, gender analysis, and race and class studies, Women and Gender in the New South shapes this accumulated scholarship into an interpretative overlay that takes southern women and men from the ravages of one war to the opportunities of another.
Lone Star Pasts: Memory and History in Texas (Elma Dill Russell Spencer Series in the West and Southwest)
Author(s): Gregg Cantrell, Elizabeth Hayes Turner
Publication date: 2006-12-01
ISBN: 158544569X, ISBN-13: 9781585445691
Current historians’ views of Texas in the nineteenth century and especially the significance of the Alamo as a site of memory in architecture, art, and film across the years comprise a major element of this volume. Other nineteenth-century historical events are also examined through their memorializations in the twentieth century: the construction of Civil War monuments by the United Daughters of the Confederacy, public and private Juneteenth celebrations, and the Tejano memorial on the Capitol grounds commemorating the history of Mexicans in Texas. Twentieth-century chapters include collective memories and meaning attached to the Ku Klux Klan, the significance of the civil rights movement in the eyes of different generations of Texans, and the lasting (or fading) Texan memories of Lyndon Baines Johnson.
The volume editors offer these studies as a model of how Texas historians can begin to incorporate memory into their work, as historians of other regions have done. In the process, they offer a more nuanced and even a more applied version of Texas history than many of us learned in school.
Clio's Southern Sisters: Interviews with Leaders of the Southern Association for Women Historians (SOUTHERN WOMEN)
Author(s): Constance B. Schulz, Elizabeth Hayes Turner
Publication date: 2004-10-12
ISBN: 0826215416, ISBN-13: 9780826215413
Beyond Image and Convention: Explorations in Southern Women's History
Author(s): Janet L. Coryell, Martha H. Swain, Sandra Gioia Treadway, Elizabeth Hayes Turner
Publication date: 1998-07-06
ISBN: 0826211739, ISBN-13: 9780826211736
Despite their prevailing image and stereotype, southern women have often gone "beyond convention," living on their own terms within a society that revered tradition and compliance. Spanning the colonial era to the mid-twentieth century, Beyond Image and Convention documents women from widely varied social, economic, religious, and ethnic backgrounds who acted outside the accepted gender boundaries of their day.
Reflecting the quality and breadth of current scholarship in the field of southern women's history, this collection of essays relies upon previously untapped documentary evidence and, in the process, crafts provocative new interpretations of our collective past. The essays explore the historical experience of black and white southern women across nearly three centuries, including a white woman's sexual misconduct in colonial North Carolina, one slave woman's successful attempt to carve out an autonomous existence in southwestern Virginia, an ex-slave's fight for freedom in postbellum Missouri, and the civil rights activism of two white southern women—Sarah Patton Boyle of Virginia and Alice Norwood Spearman of South Carolina.
Breaking new ground in the study of women's history, Beyond Image and Convention provides valuable insights for both specialists and general readers.
Women, Culture, and Community: Religion and Reform in Galveston, 1880-1920
Author(s): Elizabeth Hayes Turner
Publication date: 1997-12-11
ISBN: 019511938X, ISBN-13: 9780195119381
The Hurricane of 1900, disfranchisement of black voters, and the creation of city commission government gave white women the leverage they needed to fight for a women's agenda for the city. Meanwhile, African American women, who were excluded from open civic association with whites, created their own organizations, implemented their own goals, and turned their energies to resisting and alleviating the numbing effects of racism. Separately white and black women created their own activist communities. Together, however, they changed the face of this New South city.
Based on an exhaustive database of membership in community organizations compiled by the author from local archives, Women, Culture, and Community will appeal to students of race relations in the post-Reconstruction South, women's history, and religious history.
Hidden Histories of Women in the New South (SOUTHERN WOMEN)
Author(s): Virginia Bernhard, Betty Brandon, Elizabeth Fox-Genovese, Theda Perdue, Elizabeth Hayes Turner
Publication date: 1994-07-01
ISBN: 0826209580, ISBN-13: 9780826209580
As women's history has embraced the contributions of multi-culturalism, crucial intersections between gender and race, ideology and identity, and work and life have converged to enrich the mainstream of American history. The parameters that once defined women's history have broadened from the experiences of just a few white middle-class women to include those of women from all walks of life.
Representing some of the best and most recent scholarly work in the field, the subjects of these essays reflect the diversity of southern women's lives. Women in prisons, in mental institutions, in labor unions; women activists for temperance, suffrage, birth control, and civil rights; women at home and in public life: all add their individual histories to help reshape the terrain of the American past.
Southern women's history contines to make pathbreaking strides, and students of women's history, southern history, ethnic studies, sociology, and psychology will find this volume's contributions invaluable.
Galveston and the 1900 Storm
Author(s): Patricia Bellis Bixel, Elizabeth Hayes Turner
Publication date: 0000-00-00
ISBN: 029270884X, ISBN-13: 9780292708846
The Galveston storm of 1900 reduced a cosmopolitan and economically vibrant city to a wreckage-strewn wasteland where survivors struggled without shelter, power, potable water, or even the means to summon help. At least 6,000 of the city's 38,000 residents died in the hurricane. Many observers predicted that Galveston would never recover and urged that the island be abandoned. Instead, the citizens of Galveston seized the opportunity, not just to rebuild, but to reinvent the city in a thoughtful, intentional way that reformed its government, gave women a larger role in its public life, and made it less vulnerable to future storms and flooding.
This extensively illustrated history tells the full story of the 1900 Storm and its long-term effects. The authors draw on survivors' accounts to vividly recreate the storm and its aftermath. They describe the work of local relief agencies, aided by Clara Barton and the American Red Cross, and show how their short-term efforts grew into lasting reforms. At the same time, the authors reveal that not all Galvestonians benefited from the city's rebirth, as African Americans found themselves increasingly shut out from civic participation by Jim Crow segregation laws. As the centennial of the 1900 Storm prompts remembrance and reassessment, this complete account will be essential and fascinating reading for all who seek to understand Galveston's destruction and rebirth.
University of North Texas : History
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