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TRAILBLAZERS Vol. 1

Black Women Who Helped Make America Great
American Firsts/American Icons, Volume 1
APR. 2021

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Carolina Fung Feng Chandra D. L. Waring Lyah Beth LeFlore ISBN: 978-1-940939-79-7 6 x 9; 695 pp. 2018901512 TBW202101 , , , ,
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Meet The Author

Since slavery, Black women have struggled to liberate themselves from racism and sexism. Yet despite these hurdles and under the most duress circumstances, they managed to achieve greatness. TRAILBLAZERS, Black Women Who Helped Make America Great, American Firsts/American Icons, Volume 1 by Gabrielle David shines a light on these historically marked footholds, which often led to widespread cultural change. TRAILBLAZERS is a six-volume series that examines the lives and careers of over 400 brilliant women from the eighteenth century to the present who blazed uncharted paths in every conceivable way.

Each TRAILBLAZERS volume is organized into three to four sections. Besides providing biographical information written in a warm and welcoming tone, replete with powerful photographs, David provides a historical timeline for each section written from the viewpoint of Black women that maps out the significance of the featured women that follow.

Volume 1 features an assortment of sixty-five activists, dancers, and athletes. We learn about the significance of activists like Ella Baker, Pauli Murray, Rosina Tucker, and Clara Day, who represent the hundreds of unnamed women who participated in the civil rights and labor movements. We re-discover dancers Jeni Legon and Margot Webb, who are honored alongside dance legends Josephine Baker, Katherine Dunham, Janet Collins, and a new generation of dancers including Misty Copeland, Dormeshia Sumbry-Edwards, and choreographers like Camille A. Brown, and Cynthia Oliver. And then there are the Black women athletes who disrupted the world of sports, including the nearly forgotten tennis champion Ora Washington, and Alice Coachman, the first to compete and win in the Olympics, to Simone Biles, the most decorated gymnast in Olympic history. Throughout the series, as David re-introduces many of these women into the public sphere, they are not always in predictable ways. For example, Debbie Allen makes a brief appearance in this volume, not for her acting or as a director, but rather as the dancer she initially trained to be, reminding us that Black women are multifaceted, multitalented, and complex. What binds these women together is that as they struggled on the front lines, they shook-up the status quo of Black people in America. Throughout the volume, David also challenges the socially conditioned assumptions, stereotypes, and false binaries that denigrate Black women’s bodies particularly in dance and sports, including the barriers they face in how they wear their hair. In this regard, David addresses the totality of Black womanhood: physically, culturally and politically.

With painstaking research, David has created an affordable and visually appealing accessible reference book. From the foremothers who blazed trails and broke barriers, to the women who follow in their footsteps, TRAILBLAZERS offers powerful and inspiring role models for women and girls from all cultural backgrounds, and for the intellectually curious. TRAILBLAZERS is a clarion call for recognition of the transformative work Black women have done and continue to do. Written in accessible prose that contains personal reflections for a broad audience, TRAILBLAZERS also serves as a vital reference guide for use in schools and libraries.

Contributors

Edited by Carolina Fung Feng

CAROLINA FUNG FENG was born and raised in Costa Rica to Chinese parents, and grew up speaking Span-ish and Cantonese before she learned English. Her interest in linguistics led her to study translation, and she earned a BA in Spanish-English translation and interpretation, and English Language Arts from Hunter College (CUNY). She also holds Cambridge CELTA certification and has taught ESL to adult immigrants, and has worked as an activist for several nonprofit organizations in New York City. Hey Yo! Yo Soy! was her first literary translation, and Fung Feng has continued to serve as copy editor and translator for 2Leaf Press, and currently serves as the editor of the TRAILBLAZERS series.

Introduction by Chandra D. L. Waring

CHANDRA D. L. WARING is an Assistant Professor at the University of Massachusetts-Lowell. Her research focuses on the growing multiracial population. Her work decenters the shortsighted, yet convenient narrative that the increasing multiracial population is evidence of a less racially contentious and more racially harmonious society. Her interest in race stems from being raised in a multiracial family in a three very different contexts: Germany, Georgia, and Connecticut. Her work has been published in Sociology of Race and Ethnicity, Sociological Perspectives, Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race, Social Identities, Feminist Teacher, Race, Gender & Class and Sociological Imagination. Waring earned her PhD in sociology from the University of Connecticut, where she was a Multicultural Fellow.

Foreword by Lyah Beth LeFlore

LYAH BETH LEFLORE is a television and film producer, author, and music supervisor. LeFlore has worked at Nickelodeon; Uptown Records/Entertainment; Wolf Films/Universal; Anthony Hemingway Productions; and Alan Haymon Development, where she helped broker major talent deals under the company’s lucrative partnerships with powerhouse companies like Sony Television Studios and Live Nation. LeFlore is also the author of eight critically-acclaimed books, two of which are National Bestsellers. Her novels include: Last Night A DJ Saved My Life (2006), and Wildflowers (2009). She is the co-author of non-fiction books, The Strawberry Letter: Real Talk, Real Advice, Because Bitterness Isn’t Sexy (2012) with Shirley Strawberry; and I Got Your Back: A Father and Son Keep It Real About Love, Fatherhood, Family, and Friendship (2007), with R&B music legends, Eddie Levert Sr. and Gerald Levert. She currently has various TV and film projects in development, including a limited series entitled “Ferguson,” based on her book Tell the Truth & Shame the Devil: The Life, Legacy, and Love of My Son Michael Brown (2015) co-authored with Lezley McSpadden, mother of slain Ferguson teen, Michael Brown. LeFlore is the Co-Founder and Executive Director of the literary arts-based nonprofit, The Shirley Bradley LeFlore Foundation, which honors LeFlore’s late mother, St. Louis Poet Laureate Emeritus, and 2Leaf Press author, Shirley Bradley Price LeFlore.

Here's What People Are Saying

“The first book in an anticipated six-volume set, TRAILBLAZERS is an inspiring, comprehensive work. With a multidisciplinary background in music, design, and poetry, David provides the model of activist scholarship that combines academic nuance and sophistication with an engaging writing style that is accessible to general readership, such as David’s essay that convincingly demonstrates how women served as the “foot soldiers” of the civil rights movement. Backed by impressive endnotes and references, each chapter is encyclopedic in breadth while offering fresh analytical insights into Black women who are well covered in the existing literature, like Rosa Parks. The choice to combine the topics of activism, dance, and sports makes for an eclectic collection . . . . Accompanied by dozens of stark, powerful black-and-white photographs and portraits, this is a visually arresting volume whose words match the power of its images. An exciting resource in a promising, thorough multivolume celebration of Black women.” Kirkus Review

“TRAILBLAZERS, BLACK WOMEN WHO HELPED MAKE AMERICA GREAT, AMERICAN FIRSTS/AMERICAN ICONS is highly recommended for collections strong in women’s issues, minority history and social change, and biography alike. There’s nothing in print that holds the same depth of historical and social analysis, the attention to researched, footnoted facts . . . or the same ability to inspire. Each biography is also presented with information that ties each iconic woman to history via their social contributions. This translates to more than the typical biography sketch of individual achievement, providing a series of powerful links to the combined effort to change Black experiences around the world. The historical overviews for each section, written from the viewpoint of African American women, also offer powerful guidelines for change that are not just educational, but inspirational. Readers of all ages need this survey because, unlike other biographical collections, TRAILBLAZERS fills in the blanks that connect individual lives and achievement to effecting real changes within communities.” —D. Donovan, Sr. Reviewer, Midwest Book Review

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