Ruth Feldstein

Ruth Sara Feldstein is an American historian with research interests in United States history, with focus on 20th-century culture and politics; women's and gender history; and African American history. Currently she is professor of history and American studies at Rutgers University.[1][2]

Education

B.A. in Arts (1986) from the University of Pennsylvania[3] (magna cum laude[4]). M.A. in History (1989) from Brown University.[5] Ph.D. in History (1996) from Brown.[1]

Work

Her book Motherhood in Black and White: Race and Sex in American Liberalism, 1930-1965 (Cornell, 2000) she traces the history if liberalism between the eras of the New Deal and Great Society, and argues that in its development central were conservative gender ideologies, which perpetuated the family stereotypes of bad mothering by domineering "black matriarchs" and bad white "moms".[1][6]

Her article about Nina Simone[7] earned her the Letitia Woods Brown Memorial Prize, Best Article on Black Women’s History.[1]

Her book How It Feels to Be Free: Black Women Entertainers and the Civil Rights Movement (2013), won the Benjamin Hooks National Book Award and the International Association for Media History's Michael Nelson Prize,[2] in which she explores the influence of women entertainers (Lena Horne, Miriam Makeba, Nina Simone, Abbey Lincoln, Diahann Carroll, Cicely Tyson) on the civil rights and feminist movements.[8][9]

gollark: My libraries just have a minified line at the top for downloading dependencies they need.
gollark: CC has many problems for this, like:* Most users are kind of noobish and will just use the simplest solution* There's already a massive patchwork of approaches (mostly just direct download)* People will be annoyed at more installation steps since probably you'll end up installing the package manager for one application you want* Libraries are crazy too - most people pass around old pastebin links
gollark: Luarocks is for libraries.
gollark: They have standards bodies and then someone goes off and does their own thing and that gets popular and then they try to merge the popular thing with the standard so we get weird bodges.
gollark: Likely result:one program uses itit's posted on the forums then ignored

References

  1. Profile: Ruth Feldstein Archived 2017-12-12 at the Wayback Machine at Rutgers
  2. "Ruth Feldstein", speaker profile at the Organization of American Historians
  3. University of Pensilvania archives (retrieved December 11, 2017)
  4. "Ruth Feldstein and Asa Nixon Marry", The New York Times, August 20, 1990
  5. Brown University, The Two Hundred and Twenty-First Commencement, Providence, Rhode Island, May 29, 1989
  6. "Publisher's review of Motherhood in Black and White"
  7. Ruth Feldstein, “’I Don’t Trust You Anymore’; Nina Simone, Culture, and Black Activism in the 1960s,” Journal of American History 87, no. 4 (2005): 1365
  8. "his Author Is Redefining Feminism in the Civil Rights Movement", by Lauren Byrnes, April 2, 2014
  9. "Harnessing Celebrity to Civil Rights Cause - ‘How It Feels to Be Free’ Salutes Black Female Entertainers", The New York Times, January 15, 2014


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