
- This event has passed.
For Whose Protection?: Black Women and Confinement in the Late-19th Century
Hosted by Ball State University African American Studies ProgramJoin Charlene Fletcher of the Advancing Racial Equity Speakers Bureau for a free community talk presented by Ball State University African American Studies Program.
Event Details
This talk illuminates the lives of confined Black women by examining places like jails, prisons, mental health asylums, and – a site not typically considered confining – the home and related domestic spaces. I explore how Black women defied and defined confinement through their interactions with public, social, and political entities of the period and how they challenged Victorian ideas of race and femininity in the late 19th century.
Charlene J. Fletcher is an assistant professor of history at Butler University. She holds a Ph.D. in History from Indiana University, specializing in 19th-century United States and African American history and gender studies. Before returning to Indiana, Charlene led a domestic violence/sexual assault program and one of the most significant prison reentry initiatives in New York City, assisting women and men in transitioning from incarceration to society. Charlene’s first book, Confined Femininity: Race, Gender, and Incarceration in Kentucky, 1865-1920, is under contract with the University of North Carolina Press.
The talk will take place at the L.A Pittenger Student Center in Cardinal Hall A (room 219A) on the second
floor. Parking is available at the parking garage immediately south of the Student Center.