Stepping Lively in Place: The Not-Married, Free Women of Civil-War-Era Natchez, Mississippi

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Enlivened with profiles and vignettes of some of the remarkable people whose histories inform this study, Stepping Lively in Place shows how free, single women navigated life in a busy slave-based river-port town before and during the Civil War, and how these women transitioned during Reconstruction, emancipation, and thereafter. It examines how free, single women in one city (including prostitutes, entrepreneurs, and elite plantation ladies) coped with life unencumbered, or unprotected, by husbands. The book pays close attention to the laws affecting southern gender and sociocultural traditions, focusing especially on how the town’s free, single women maneuvered adroitly but guardedly within the legal arena in which they lived. Joyce Linda Broussard looks at all types of free, single women―black and white, law-abiding and criminal―including spinsters, widows, divorcees, and abandoned women. She demonstrates the nuanced degrees to which these women understood that the legal, cultural, and social traditions of their place and time could alternately constrain or empower them, often achieving thereby a considerable amount of independence as women. Before the Civil War, says Broussard, the town’s patriarchal community tolerated (often reluctantly) even the most independent-minded (and often disorderly) free, single women―as long as their behavior left unchallenged the institutions of white male mastery, slavery, and marriage. She explores the impact of the Civil War and Reconstruction on the town’s single women, especially when thousands of formerly enslaved women and new widows swelled their ranks. With slavery dead and male authority undermined, Broussard demonstrates how the not-married women of postbellum Natchez confronted a world turned inside out with a determinedly resolute dexterity.

Author(s): Joyce Linda Broussard
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Year: 2016

Language: English
Pages: 368
City: Athens

Cover
Half Title
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of Illustrations and Tables
Acknowledgments
A Note on Terminology
Introduction
CHAPTER 1. Antebellum Natchez: The Place in Which They Stepped
CHAPTER 2. Stepping Lively amid Their Shadows: The Single White Women of Antebellum Natchez
CHAPTER 3. Stepping Out on Their Own: The Divorcing Women of Antebellum Natchez
CHAPTER 4. Stepping Beyond Their Husbands’ Graves: The Widows of Antebellum Natchez
CHAPTER 5. Stepping Lively in Place: The Free-Black, Not-Married Women of Antebellum Natchez
CHAPTER 6. Stepping Lively at the Edge: The Disorderly, Not-Married Women of Antebellum Natchez
CHAPTER 7. Stepping Through the Tumult: Not-Married Women in Confederate and Yankee-Occupied Natchez
CHAPTER 8. Stepping into the Breach: The Women of Postbellum Natchez—Single and Married, Black and White
CHAPTER 9. Stepping Through the Ruins: Personal Sketches
Epilogue
Notes
Bibliography
Index
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W