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Motherwit

An Alabama Midwife's Story

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"Motherwit" and "common sense" were the watchwords of Onnie Lee Logan's career as a lay midwife in Mobile County, Alabama.

Although she received little formal education, endured the Depression and faced a racist society, Onnie Lee Logan experienced her life as the triumphant fulfillment of a dream to be one of those who could bring babies into the world, as her mother and grandmother had done before her.

Her story, told in the soft, now vanishing dialect of the Deep South, is powerful and fascinating oral history. Motherwit follows her life through her work as a servant for a wealthy Mobile family, her troubled marriage during the Depression, and her struggle to become a licensed midwife. We watch as she delivers the babies of both black and white women of Alabama—losing only one baby in 40 years. Onnie Lee Logan's forbearance in the face of the crushing prejudice of the rural South makes inspiring and unforgettable reading. When she passed away in 1995, the New York Times declared her a "folk hero," and Time called her book "a feminist classic."

Filled with startling drama and profound wisdom, Motherwit is an important contribution to African-American history.

"An amazing story. A heroic woman and life after my own heart." Alice Walker

"To have told her own story, to have borne this eloquent witness to her life is Onnie Lee Logan's final triumph." Ellen Douglas in the Washington Post Book World

"Oral history doesn't come much better than this." Booklist

"Beautiful...her passion rings through in every line." Los Angeles Times

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 1, 1989
      A life well lived unfolds in this exuberant, unlettered telling of a midwife's story. Logan, born circa 1910 into a large, rural, God-fearing family in Sweetwater, Ala., recalls how, only a generation removed from slavery, she entered into her life's work. During 40 years she delivered hundreds of babies, mostly to poor white and black mothers in the depths of the Depression, providing help when doctors were either scarce or unwilling. Her oral biography is at once a mini-history of Southern midwifery, essentially a black phenomenon in the region, and a full-circle view of her career from initial toleration to lauded acceptance by medical professionals. In Logan's rich, regional speech as she talks with Clark, who teaches at the University of Alabama, a strong, faith-filled woman is heard; her eloquent memoir is vivid Americana. First serial to Life magazine.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 1, 1991
      An Alabama midwife recalls her 40-year career, describing how she began her life's work and her eventual acceptance by the medical community. ``In Logan's rich, regional speech . . . a strong, faith-filled woman is heard; her eloquent memoir is vivid Americana,'' asserted PW.

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Languages

  • English

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