{"product_id":"a-voice-from-the-south-1","title":"A Voice from the South","description":"\u003cp\u003e\u003cspan\u003eIn 1892, Anna Julia Cooper — scholar, educator, and daughter of an enslaved woman — published one of the foundational works of Black feminist thought. A Voice from the South is a sustained, brilliant argument that the moral progress of a people cannot be measured only by the freedom granted to its men. The Black woman, Cooper writes, has been the one “silent and voiceless note” in a national conversation that claimed to speak for everyone. Her book refuses that silence.\u003c\/span\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cspan\u003eCooper’s eight essays range across the failures of the American church, the philosophy of higher education for women, the cruelties of racial classification, and the particular blindness of reformers who could champion universal liberty while overlooking half of humanity. She is pointed, sometimes withering, always constructive — writing not from bitterness but from the conviction that justice is both possible and necessary.\u003c\/span\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cspan\u003eThis edition pairs Cooper’s landmark text with Project of a Law Forbidding the Teaching of Women to Read (1801) by Sylvain Maréchal — a text Cooper herself references in these pages. Maréchal was a French democratic radical who had spent his career attacking monarchy and aristocracy. Yet he proposed, with apparent seriousness, a law banning women from literacy. Scholars still debate whether he intended it as satire. What is not debated is that the text was received, cited, and used seriously in arguments against women’s education for decades afterward. A joke that functions as oppression is not, in any meaningful sense, only a joke.\u003c\/span\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cbr\u003e\u003cspan\u003eCooper knew this text. She invokes Maréchal directly as an example of the kind of thinking — whether cynical or sincere — that her own work was written to answer. Including his full text here restores the conversation Cooper was actually having. Most modern readers encounter her arguments without knowing what she was arguing against. Now you can read both sides.\u003c\/span\u003e\u003c\/p\u003e","brand":"My Store","offers":[{"title":"Default Title","offer_id":45503249514543,"sku":null,"price":35.0,"currency_code":"USD","in_stock":true}],"thumbnail_url":"\/\/cdn.shopify.com\/s\/files\/1\/0717\/2171\/3711\/files\/2336a204-5251-4acd-bbf7-fb08427653b6.jpg?v=1782032680","url":"https:\/\/www.revoltbookstore.com\/products\/a-voice-from-the-south-1","provider":"Revolt Books","version":"1.0","type":"link"}