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5+ Works 171 Members 3 Reviews

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Works by Charlotte L. Forten

Associated Works

Sisters of the Earth: Women's Prose and Poetry About Nature (1991) — Contributor — 442 copies, 5 reviews
African-American Poetry: An Anthology, 1773-1927 (1997) — Contributor — 300 copies
Black Women in White America: A Documentary History (1972) — Contributor — 299 copies, 1 review
The Norton Anthology of African American Literature {2nd edition} (2003) — Contributor, some editions — 282 copies, 2 reviews
African American Poetry: 250 Years of Struggle and Song (2020) — Contributor — 235 copies, 4 reviews
The American Transcendentalists: Essential Writings (2006) — Contributor — 208 copies
The Civil War: The Third Year Told by Those Who Lived It (2013) — Contributor — 169 copies, 1 review
The Portable Nineteenth-Century African American Women Writers (2017) — Contributor — 76 copies, 1 review

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3 reviews
Charlotte L. Forten (1838-1914) was sensitive, intelligent, and educated in the culture and conventions of pre-Civil War America. But one thing distinguished her from other young Philadelphia women: she was black, destined to endure the constant insults that were accorded any person of color in her day. Her remarkable diary reveals how her resentment against the prejudice of the white world became transformed into an iron determination to excel. Impatient to help the self-advancement of show more other blacks, she went to Massachusetts to become a teacher and became active in literary and abolitionist circles. Then, during the Civil War, she traveled to South Carolina to participate in a unique social experiment involving newly freed blacks of the Sea Islands. In 1878 she married the Reverand Francis J. Grimké, the son of Henry Grimké whose two sisters, Sarah and Angelina, were prominent abolitionists. Charlotte Forten’s zeal for justice and her personal renderings of the events and people of her day make her journal an important document in American social history. Her bequest to humanity, Ray Allen Billington writes, “was a journal which could reveal to a later generation her undying belief in human decency and equality.” - from publisher show less
I understood it was a children's book when I ordered it, but I still expected there to be way more diary entries than what there was.

Perhaps acceptable for a 3rd grader.
This book is taken from the writings of Charlotte Forten. At age 15, Charlotte Forten began a journal which she kept until 1864. She aslo kept a diary from 1855 to 1892.

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Works
5
Also by
11
Members
171
Popularity
#124,898
Rating
4.0
Reviews
3
ISBNs
15

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