AI Article Synopsis

  • The text explores the hidden relationship between Black clubwomen Frances Reynolds Keyser and Mary McLeod Bethune, revealing a deeper bond than what their public personas suggested.
  • The author argues that the constraints of respectability politics shaped how these women presented themselves, often prioritizing normative heterosexuality despite the complexities of their lives.
  • By recovering biographies and archival materials, the study aims to enhance understanding of the everyday experiences of Black women activists, challenging dominant narratives that overlook their contributions and personal identities.

Article Abstract

Through recovered biographies and unpublished archival papers, I examine the connection of two Black clubwomen, Frances Reynolds Keyser and Mary McLeod Bethune, who shared a modest ceremony that bonded them for life. I argue that their private relationship was deeper than they could credibly portray through their public image at the time, bound as they were by the strictures of respectability politics. Their cultivation of respectability was an irreplaceable asset in, and indeed a necessity of their work, but it also demanded the presentation of normative heterosexuality. In addition, I conducted a creative investigation of the archives to draw attention to their everyday lives and experiences in Daytona. Many Black women activists' experiences do not conform to the white male-centric narrative ethos present and the assumption of heterosexuality is a dominant yet wholly inaccurate narrative on Black club women's legacies and activism. Biographical recoveries can change, complicate, and enhance our understanding of these women's relationships regarding their well-curated public personas as clubwomen. This study aims to provide an intellectual history of Black women through the club movement by putting biographical data front and center, especially by examining their own words.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/10894160.2024.2385714DOI Listing

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