Summary Of Woman Of Color, Daughter Of Privilege By Amanda Wilson

1016 Words5 Pages

In 1995, at the University of Georgia Kent Anderson Leslie, published her first book called “Woman of Color, Daughter of Privilege: Amanda America Dickson, 1849-1893”. The book is about a Girl names Amanda America Dickson who was born to a slave mother Julia Dickson and a white popular planter David Dickson. When Julia was 13 years old David who was in his forties at the time raped her and that turned into Julia getting pregnant. Amanda was born November 20,1849 and given to her father David and her grandmother Elizabeth Dickson. Her mother decided to give her up because she wanted her to be born free and not have to live the life she has had to live. Growing up Amanda was treated like a typical child of a planter. She was given everything …show more content…

Also, how some of them were “mulatto” meaning mixed with black and white and not abandoned by their father because of them being afraid of their reputation declining. I did not know about Amanda before reading her story. She lived a good yet complicated life because come did not want to accept her just because she was part black overlooking the white in her. In the book it states “DAVID, JULIA FRANCES, AND AMANDA AMERICA DICKSON’s stories represent threads that intertwine to form a pattern, a pattern distorted by the tensions between racial ideology and family, between paternalism and exploitation, and between power and the control of power in an interdependent community. As a consequence, Amanda America Dickson’s life unfolded within the boundaries of her father’s social and economic power, her mother’s conflicting loyalties, and her own evolving sense of self” (Page 32). Not only is this book about Amanda Dickson, but it is about her father and mother as well. About her father I learned that he was a planter that worked his way up and eventually was one of the richest planters in the county. Julia Dickson her mother I learned that she was a slave bravely gave up her child, so she could live a good free life, but also was still there as a mentor for her daughter, and that while she was a slave she was also very smart making her helping Mr. Dickson with his business, as well being his