Historic

Will the real Mariah Watkins please stand up?: A case of inaccuracy and marginalization of African American history and appearance

Authors
  • Jennifer Farley Gordon (Iowa State University)
  • Eulanda A. Sanders (Iowa State University)

Abstract

Who was Mariah Watkins? What was her identity, and how did appearance inform that identity? Watkins was an African American woman. Although likely born a slave, she lived most of her free years as a woman of property and of skill, working as a documented nurse and midwife in Neosho, Missouri. This paper relies on archival records, photographic analysis, and material culture to explore Watkins as a case study in the challenges of documenting African American appearance during and after the antebellum period in the United States.

How to Cite:

Gordon, J. F. & Sanders, E. A., (2015) “Will the real Mariah Watkins please stand up?: A case of inaccuracy and marginalization of African American history and appearance”, International Textile and Apparel Association Annual Conference Proceedings 72(1).

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Published on
13 Nov 2015
Peer Reviewed