La Nouvelle-Orléans au XIXe siècle : femmes de couleur libres, femmes de pouvoir ?
This article dwells on the emergence of a few feminine figures in the studies conducted by historians of Louisiana since the 1980s and examines the relative invisibility of women in the early historiography of New Orleans’s antebellum period (1800-1860). Surprisingly at first sight, those women are...
Saved in:
Main Author: | Nathalie Dessens |
---|---|
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Published: |
Presses Universitaires du Midi
2010-09-01
|
Series: | Anglophonia |
Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://journals.openedition.org/acs/2073 |
Tags: |
Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
|
Similar Items
-
“Mes dernières volontés”: Testaments to the Life of Marie Couvent, a Former Slave in New Orleans
by: Elizabeth C. Neidenbach
Published: (2013-05-01) -
"...dans le milieu de la Ville qui fait face à la place, se trouvent tous les besoins publiques..." : remarques sur la notion de centralité urbanistique en Louisiane coloniale et à New Orleans
by: Gilles-Antoine Langlois
Published: (2006-06-01) -
Couleurs et dorures du portail roman de Cluny III. Restitution en 3D d’une œuvre disparue
by: Juliette Rollier-Hanselmann, et al.
Published: (2010-10-01) -
Orléans (Loiret), crypte de Saint-Aignan
by: Chantal Arnaud, et al.
Published: (2004-08-01) -
Préférences pour les couleurs chez le macaque de Barbarie ("Macaca sylvanus")
by: Prune Lagner
Published: (2015-03-01)