Life is All About Choices shares one woman's ideas about relationships and life experiences through an honest and stimulating exploration of the doubts, fears, and uncertainties that often accompany male/female relationships as well as broader social issues.
Jacqueline Jones relies on her personal observations and experiences to encourage, inspire, uplift, and empower others to overcome life's challenges and barriers with a high degree of self-confidence. Jacqueline provides information on how to identify personal weaknesses, find help from a variety of sources, and unleash the power to...
Life is All About Choices shares one woman's ideas about relationships and life experiences through an honest and stimulating exploration of the doubt...
Life is All About Choices shares one woman's ideas about relationships and life experiences through an honest and stimulating exploration of the doubts, fears, and uncertainties that often accompany male/female relationships as well as broader social issues.
Jacqueline Jones relies on her personal observations and experiences to encourage, inspire, uplift, and empower others to overcome life's challenges and barriers with a high degree of self-confidence. Jacqueline provides information on how to identify personal weaknesses, find help from a variety of sources, and unleash the power to...
Life is All About Choices shares one woman's ideas about relationships and life experiences through an honest and stimulating exploration of the doubt...
The forces that shaped the institution of slavery in the American South endured, albeit in altered form, long after slavery was abolished. Toiling in sweltering Virginia tobacco factories or in the kitchens of white families in Chicago, black women felt a stultifying combination of racial discrimination and sexual prejudice. And yet, in their efforts to sustain family ties, they shared a common purpose with wives and mothers of all classes.
In Labor of Love, Labor of Sorrow, historian Jacqueline Jones offers a powerful account of the changing role of black women, lending a voice to...
The forces that shaped the institution of slavery in the American South endured, albeit in altered form, long after slavery was abolished. Toiling in ...
In 1656, a Maryland planter tortured and killed an enslaved man named Antonio, an Angolan who refused to work in the fields. Three hundred years later, Simon P. Owens battled soul-deadening technologies as well as the fiction of race that divided him from his co-workers in a Detroit auto-assembly plant. Separated by time and space, Antonio and Owens nevertheless shared a distinct kind of political vulnerability; they lacked rights and opportunities in societies that accorded marked privileges to people labeled white. An American creation myth posits that these two black men were the...
In 1656, a Maryland planter tortured and killed an enslaved man named Antonio, an Angolan who refused to work in the fields. Three hundred years later...
From a prize-winning historian, a new portrait of an extraordinary activist and the turbulent age in which she livedGoddess of Anarchy recounts the formidable life of the militant writer, orator, and agitator Lucy Parsons. Born to an enslaved woman in Virginia in 1851 and raised in Texas-where she met her husband, the Haymarket "martyr" Albert Parsons-Lucy was a fearless advocate of First Amendment rights, a champion of the working classes, and one of the most prominent figures of African descent of her era. And yet, her life was riddled with contradictions-she...
From a prize-winning historian, a new portrait of an extraordinary activist and the turbulent age in which she livedGoddess of Anar...