Stewart Wins Research Prize in Philosophy
Receives Beaney Prize for article contribution
In late April, the British Journal for History of Philosophy (BJHP) awarded its newly established Beaney Prize—its annual prize for the best contribution to widening the canon it publishes—to Dr. Lindsey Stewart, assistant professor in the Department of Philosophy, for her paper “Count it all joy’: black women’s interventions in the abolitionist tradition.” The BJHP is widely regarded as one of the leading international journals in the area.
Article abstract:
In her introduction to Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, Angela Davis notes
that the abolitionist tradition often harboured a “gendered framework” that defined
“black freedom” in terms of the “suppression of black womanhood”. As such, Davis charges
us with the task of “develop[ing] a framework that foregrounds both the complexities
of gendered violence under slavery and possible gendered strategies for freedom”.
In this paper, I engage in this task in two ways. First, I analyze key gendered aspects
of the abolitionist tradition that erase black women’s agency. One important implication
of my argument is that the abolitionist tradition prioritizes physical resistance
in how we define ‘black freedom’ and in narratives of black life. Second, I argue
that black women have intervened in this tradition by broadening our sense of agency
and extending the landscape of liberation. My primary example will be hoodoo practices
that emphasize divine submission rather than resistance in the works of black women
abolitionists, such as in Scenes of the Life of Harriet Tubman and The Memoir of Old
Elizabeth, a Coloured Woman.
The Beaney Prize was established in 2021 in honor of Mike Beaney, Editor of the journal from 2011 to 2021 and the winner receives £1,000. View announcement here.
For more, contact Stewart at lstwart6@memphis.edu.