Academic literature on the topic 'Walker, C.J. – Madam – 1867-1919'

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Walker, C.J. – Madam – 1867-1919"

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Smith, Ruth Queen. "Madam C. J. Walker (1867-1919) African American Entrepreneur, Philanthropist, Social Change Activist, And Educator Of African American Women." 2007. http://trace.tennessee.edu/utk_graddiss/306.

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Madam C.J. Walker was born on December 23, 1867. She died May 25, 1919. For her first thirty-seven years, she worked as a field hand, a washerwoman, a domestic, and a cook. With no formal education, she created the Madam C.J. Walker Manufacturing Company, an international business that manufactured ethnic beauty and hair care products. She also started a network of beauty colleges that taught African American women the science, art and the marketing of cosmetology. In less than fifteen years, her hard work and her inspired work force of over twenty-thousand African American women made her one of the most noted self-made millionaires, black or white, of her time. Madam Walker helped many and inspired thousands with her philanthropy and generosity. Perhaps most notably, she was a financier and leader in the civil rights movement and publicly worked for political social change. This study is interpretive biography that examines Madam Walker’s accomplishments and contributions in the early twentieth century. Additionally, I present a model of adult education informed by Madam Walker’s life story. Based on Madam Walker’s ways of educating African American adult women, the Smith Model of Adult Education for Individual and Community Change is intended to expand the diversity of models available to adult educators for initiating and sustaining personal and community change. The model seeks to bring about social change through economic development. This social change begins with and is grounded within adult education practices. Adults desire and learn for personal improvement and change. Communities are impacted by small groups of adults who desire and need economic improvement. As individuals and small groups of adults begin to transform communities through economic improvement, they identify philanthropic needs within their communities. The ultimate goal is social change through the power gained from adult education and economic development. Adult educators, philanthropic organizations, and economic developers are challenged by this interpretive biography and the Smith Model to identify persons of interest whose lives have significant themes and threads of the future promise and potential of adult education based on Madam Walker’s accomplishments, contributions and the Smith Model.
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Books on the topic "Walker, C.J. – Madam – 1867-1919"

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Bundles, A'Lelia Perry. Madam C.J. Walker. Chelsea House, 2008.

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Her dream of dreams: The rise and triumph of Madam C.J. Walker. Alfred A. Knopf, 2003.

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Yannuzzi, Della A. Madam C.J. Walker: Self-made businesswoman. Enslow Publishers, 2000.

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Simons, Lisa M. Bolt. Madam C. J. Walker: Inventor and Businesswoman. Capstone, 2018.

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Simons, Lisa M. Bolt. Madam C. J. Walker: Inventor and Businesswoman. Capstone, 2018.

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Simons, Lisa M. Bolt. Madam C. J. Walker: Inventor and Businesswoman. Capstone, 2018.

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Freeman, Tyrone McKinley. Madam C. J. Walker's Gospel of Giving. University of Illinois Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252043451.001.0001.

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Madam C. J. Walker’s Gospel of Giving: Black Women’s Philanthropy during Jim Crow presents the first comprehensive story of Walker’s philanthropic giving arguing that she was a significant philanthropist who challenged Jim Crow and serves as a foremother of African American philanthropy today. Born Sarah Breedlove (1867-1919) to formerly enslaved parents on a cotton plantation during Reconstruction, Madam C. J. Walker became a beauty-culture entrepreneur and was known as America’s first self-made female millionaire. This book presents the story of Madam Walker’s philanthropic actions through the author’s use of historical methods and archival research. The result is a philanthropic biography that reinterprets Walker’s life, legacy, and meaning through giving. Using analytical frameworks from philanthropic studies and black women’s history, the author constructs the appropriate lenses for interpreting Walker’s lived experiences as a philanthropist through her own words, motivations, relationships, and actions. Organized around five types of gifts that Walker made—opportunity, education, activism, material resources, and legacy—the text illustrates the broader cultural contexts and philanthropic practices of generosity that informed black women’s lives and giving at the beginning of the twentieth century. Madam Walker’s Gospel of Giving provides a different view of who counts as a philanthropist and what counts as philanthropy in the public and scholarly conversations dominated by the perspectives of white wealthy elite donors. It reclaims and names black women as philanthropists using Walker as an example.
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McKissack, Pat, and Fredrick McKissack. Madam C. J. Walker: Inventor and Millionaire. Enslow Elementary, 2013.

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Lowry, Beverly. Her Dream of Dreams: The Rise and Triumph of Madam C. J. Walker. Vintage, 2004.

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Lowry, Beverly. Her Dream of Dreams: The Rise and Triumph of Madam C. J. Walker. Knopf, 2003.

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