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<SPAN STYLE= "" >A Hairdresser's Experience in High Life</SPAN>

256 pp., 6.125 x 9.25, 6 illus., appends., notes, bibl.

Cloth
ISBN  978-0-8078-3335-3
Published: November 2009

Paper
ISBN  978-0-8078-5982-7
Published: November 2009

A Hairdresser's Experience in High Life

By Eliza Potter


Here is the first fully annotated edition of a landmark in early African American literature--Eliza Potter's 1859 autobiography, A Hairdresser's Experience in High Life. Potter was a freeborn black woman who, as a hairdresser, was in a unique position to hear about, receive confidences from, and observe wealthy white women--and she recorded it all in a revelatory book that delighted Cincinnati's gossip columnists at the time. But more important is Potter's portrait of herself as a wage-earning woman, proud of her work, who earned high pay and accumulated quite a bit of money as one of the nation's earliest "beauticians" at a time when most black women worked at the bottom of the socioeconomic ladder. Because her work offered insights into the private lives of elite white women, Potter carved out a literary space that featured a black working woman at the center, rather than at the margins, of the era's transformations in gender, race, and class structure. Xiomara Santamarina provides an insightful introduction to this edition that includes newly discovered information about Potter, discusses the author's strong satirical voice and proud working-class status, and places the narrative in the context of nineteenth-century literature and history.

About the Author

Xiomara Santamarina is associate professor of English at the University of Michigan. She is author of Belabored Professions: Autobiography and Black Women's Labor (UNC Press) and several essays on early African American literature.


Reviews

"This expert edition brings Eliza Potter and her intriguingly unconventional and controversial text into focus in ways that allow us to appreciate more fully than ever before the daring originality of the author's enterprise. This is a must read for anyone interested in the development of African American literature in the nineteenth century."
--William L. Andrews, editor of The North Carolina Roots of African American Literature: An Anthology



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