Skip to content
From Slave Mothers & Southern Belles to Radical Reformers & Lost Cause Ladies
Representing Women in the Civil War Era
Menu
Introduction
Exhibition Gallery
Image Discussions
Portrait of Josephine Roman Aime
Portrait Of Betsy
Creole in a Red Headdress
Margaret Garner
The Emancipation of the Negroes: The Past and The Future
Cover Image from Godey’s Lady’s Book and Magazine
Two Treatments of Hagar in the Wilderness
Loreta Janeta Velazquez and Harry T. Buford
Our Women in the War
A Visit from the Old Mistress
Interior, African American Schoolhouse
Scarlett and Tara
The Old South and Avon Cosmetics
Hermes Mardi Gras Court, c. 1901-1920
Missing Link: Despair
Essays
Portrait of a Woman: A Study of The Social Implications of Antebellum Portraiture in New Orleans
Mediated Motherhood: White Authority and the Representation of Enslaved Mothers in Antebellum Visual Culture
Hagar in the Wilderness: Visualizing Antebellum Politics and Changing Views of True Womanhood
From Domesticity to Industry: Working Women in the Civil War
Shaping the South: Contested Visions of Post-War Society
Selling the Southern Belle
Southern Royalty: Race, Gender, and Discrimination During Mardi Gras From the Civil War to the Present Day
About the Curators
Acknowledgements
bwSmithsonianHagar
tstrider
April 24, 2015
April 24, 2015
0 Comment
← Previous
Next →
Leave a Reply
Cancel reply
You must be
logged in
to post a comment.