Living History: Merze Tate and Modern Black Womanhood
In this lecture, Professor Barbara Savage will explore the fascinating topic of ‘Living History: Merze Tate and Modern Black Womanhood .’ She says:

“The black woman scholar Merze Tate began in the 1930s to develop her ideas about modern black womanhood. In the 1970s, nearing the end of her career, Tate served as both an interviewer and an interviewee for Harvard’s Black Womens Oral History Project, a still-invaluable resource in African American and women’s history. That work brought full circle Tate’s ideas about black women’s lives. Looking at her life and those of the women she interviewed raises questions about the ways that intellectual biography can trouble and unsettle prevailing historical narratives, including about modern black women.”

The ‘Uncovering Women’s History’ lecture series aims to explore women’s empowerment and the contribution of women and other marginalised minorities across history.
Date: 20 June 2024, 17:30
Venue: Linacre College, St Cross Road OX1 3JA
Venue Details: Tanner Room
Speaker: Professor Barbara Savage
Organising department: Linacre College
Organiser contact email address: academic.office@linacre.ox.ac.uk
Part of: Linacre Lectures 2024: Uncovering Women's History
Booking required?: Required
Booking url: https://forms.office.com/pages/responsepage.aspx?id=G96VzPWXk0-0uv5ouFLPkSIBZJvbm0dEjFXzSuEXOM9UNFpHMVdGOVBZT0VYWjJYRjdDNVBOQ1lLUC4u
Audience: Public
Editor: Belinda Clark