In this thorough and detailed study, Richard Douglass-Chin examines
collectively for the first time the autobiographies of nineteenth-century African American women evangelists, along with their
eighteenth-century forerunner "Belinda." By studying how black
women evangelists employed dialogue created by socioeconomic
conditions, the author shows how their writings form the groundwork
for a contemporary womanist literature rooted in spirituality.
Arguing that the writings have their own unique figurations and
forms that develop and alter over time, Douglass-Chin claims that
the changing black female spiritual narrative traces an important
line in the ongoing traditions of black women's writing, a line
that has only now begun to be reclaimed and validated. Through
references to the writings of black male autobiographers Frederick
Douglass, Richard Allen, Daniel Payne, and John Jea as well as the
works of white female autobiographers Harriet Livermore and Phoebe
Palmer, Douglass-Chin is able to make valuable
comparisons.
Preacher Woman Sings the Blues begins with the study of
black evangelists Belinda, Jarena Lee, and Zilpha Elaw, continuing
with Rebecca Cox Jackson, Sojourner Truth, Julia Foote, Amanda
Smith, Elizabeth, and Virginia Broughton. The author's
discussion of Zora Neale Hurston focuses on how Hurston operates
as a connection between early black women evangelist writers and
black women writing in America today. He ends with the works of
Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, and Toni Cade Bambara.
By examining the early traditions prefiguring contemporary African
American women's texts and the impact that race and gender have on
them, Douglass-Chin shows how the nineteenth-century black women's
works are still of utmost importance to many African American women
writers today. Preacher Woman Sings the Blues makes a
valuable contribution to literary criticism and theoretical
analysis and will be welcomed by scholars and students alike.
About the Author
Richard J. Douglass-Chin is an independent scholar and lives in
Hamilton, Ontario