Tracing the full intellectual and political tradition of Black Education is IMPOSSIBLE. So various zines are dotted across this course website created by graduate students, like the one below, to honor the canons/cannons and classics we need to know. It’s a way to focus on the newest scholarship without erasing deeply entrenched Black intellectual genealogies as white curricula so often do.
(These zines of the website will continue on and on.)
(These zines of the website will continue on and on.)
A Zine Exploring A Voice from the South
by Anna Julia Cooper
created by Deja Groomes
To reference this zine:
Groomes, Deja. "Cut from a Southern Cloth: Reflections on Anna Julia Cooper's A Voice from the South (A Zine Exploring A Voice from the South by Anna Julia Cooper)." Freedom School: The Rhetorics and Histories of Black Education. https://www.fugitivelearning.com/canon-a-voice-from-the-south.html
Groomes, Deja. "Cut from a Southern Cloth: Reflections on Anna Julia Cooper's A Voice from the South (A Zine Exploring A Voice from the South by Anna Julia Cooper)." Freedom School: The Rhetorics and Histories of Black Education. https://www.fugitivelearning.com/canon-a-voice-from-the-south.html