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Banking on Freedom: Black Women in U.S. Finance Before the New Deal

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Management number 201908125 Release Date 2025/10/08 List Price $14.47 Model Number 201908125
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In Banking on Freedom, Shennette Garrett-Scott explores the story of the St. Luke Bank in Richmond, Virginia, the first and only bank run by black women, to highlight the transformative impact of black financial innovation on U.S. capitalism. The bank's success and challenges, including extralegal violence and aggressive oversight, showcase how black women carved out economic, social, and political power in contexts shaped by sexism, white supremacy, and capitalist exploitation.

Format: Paperback / softback
Length: 288 pages
Publication date: 07 May 2019
Publisher: Columbia University Press

Between 1888 and 1930, African Americans opened more than a hundred banks and thousands of other financial institutions. In Banking on Freedom, Shennette Garrett-Scott explores this rich period of black financial innovation and its transformative impact on U.S. capitalism through the story of the St. Luke Bank in Richmond, Virginia: the first and only bank run by black women.

Banking on Freedom offers an unparalleled account of how black women carved out economic, social, and political power in contexts shaped by sexism, white supremacy, and capitalist exploitation. Garrett-Scott chronicles both the bank’s success and the challenges this success wrought, including extralegal violence and aggressive oversight from state actors who saw black economic autonomy as a threat to both democratic capitalism and the social order. The teller cage and boardroom became sites of activism and resistance as the leadership of president Maggie Lena Walker and other women board members kept the bank grounded in meeting the needs of working-class black women. The first book to center black women’s engagement with the elite sectors of banking, finance, and insurance, Banking on Freedom reveals the ways gender, race, and class shaped the meanings of wealth and risk in U.S. capitalism and society.

Weight: 408g
Dimension: 155 x 229 x 16 (mm)
ISBN-13: 9780231183918


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