After completing her master's degree, Janet Morrison worked for the British civil service for many years, eventually teaching English in Spain for six years. She received her PhD in American history at the University of East Anglia.
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Description
"Meticulously researched and grounded in extensive archival sources, this book illuminates the overlooked histories of free women of color in antebellum New Orleans. Morrison offers a powerful analysis of how women defied stereotypes and reshaped their communities on their own terms."--Marian Crenshaw Austin, independent historian "Making Freedom Work is a fascinating, carefully researched, and well-written study on a unique social group in American history--the free people of color of antebellum New Orleans, or gens de couleur libres, as they called themselves. They were francophone, free, educated, Catholic, astonishingly entrepreneurial, and some of them quite wealthy. Wedged in between the white dominant group and the oppressed enslaved working class of African descent at the bottom of the existing social hierarchies, they created a social and cultural sphere of their own. Defying all odds by their sheer existence, they were an anomaly within the extremely racist, sexist, and class-stratified antebellum American South. By taking a closer look at the lives of five remarkably successful and courageous women within this social group--Henriette Delille, Eulalie Mandeville, Cecile Bonille, Marie Dolores Laveaux, and Marie Couvent--the author offers us a wonderful window into the complexities of their lives and the struggles they and their descendants had to face."--Ina J. Fandrich, author of The Mysterious Voodoo Queen, Marie Laveaux: A Study of Powerful Female Leadership in Nineteenth-Century New Orleans "Janet Morrison's deeply researched book is a valuable contribution to the study of the mutually constitutive yet often contradictory roles played by race, gender, and slavery in antebellum New Orleans, a city that offered free people of color opportunities unavailable elsewhere in the United States but was also the hub of the nation's domestic slave trade. Through well-chosen and extensively analyzed case studies, it depicts both the possibilities that these women embraced and the limitations against which they struggled."--Natalie A. Zacek, author of Thoroughbred Nation: Making America at the Racetrack, 1791-1900

