Jacqueline Anne Rouse

Jacqueline Anne Rouse is an American academic specializing in African-American history and American Studies. She is a professor at Georgia State University and the author of a book on Lugenia Burns Hope, Lugenia Burns Hope, Black Southern Reformer, published by the University of Georgia Press;[1] it was called "the most thorough study of Hope and of the Atlanta Neighborhood Union."[2]

Select bibliography

Books authored

  • Rouse, Jacqueline Anne (2004). Lugenia Burns Hope, Black Southern Reformer. U of Georgia P. ISBN 978-0-8203-2386-2. Retrieved 14 December 2010. [3][4]

Books edited

  • Crawford, Vicki L.; Jacqueline Anne Rouse; Barbara Woods (1993). Women in the Civil Rights movement: trailblazers and torchbearers, 1941-1965. Indiana UP. ISBN 978-0-253-20832-3. Retrieved 14 December 2010. [5]

Articles and book chapters

  • Rouse, Jacqueline Anne (1996). "Out of the Shadow of Tuskegee: Margaret Murray Washington, Social Activism, and Race Vindication". Journal of Negro History. 81 (1/4): 35–37. [6]
  • Rouse, Jacqueline Anne (1999). "The Atlanta Neighborhood Union, 1908-1924". In Paul D. Escott; David R. Goldfield; Sally Gregory McMillen. Major Problems in the History of the American South: The new South. Houghton Mifflin. pp. 271ff. ISBN 978-0-395-87140-9.

References

  1. Romano, Renée Christine; Leigh Raiford (2006). The Civil Rights movement in American memory. U of Georgia P. p. 285. ISBN 978-0-8203-2814-0. Retrieved 14 December 2010.
  2. Scott, Anne Firor (1990). "Most Invisible of All: Black Women's Voluntary Associations". The Journal of Southern History. 56 (1): 3–22. doi:10.2307/2210662.
  3. Masur, Louis P. (1999). The Challenge of American History. JHU. p. 235. ISBN 978-0-8018-6222-9.
  4. Jones, Lu Ann (2002). Mama learned us to work: farm women in the New South. UNC Press. p. 218. ISBN 978-0-8078-5384-9.
  5. Pierce, Paulette (1992). "Rev. of Women in the Civil Rights Movement". Gender and Society. 6 (3): 522–25. Congratulations are in order for this long-awaited correction to the masculinist bias that has systematically distorted our understanding of the Black movement
  6. Opie, Frederick Douglass (2008). Hog & hominy: soul food from Africa to America. Columbia UP. p. 194. ISBN 978-0-231-14638-8.
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