"Shirley Chisholm was born in Brooklyn, New York, where her immigrant parents scraped and saved while Shirley learned all the love in the world couldn’t pay the rent. Her father encouraged her ambition early on, telling her, “God gave you a brain, use it.” Shirley worked hard and landed a full scholarship to Brooklyn College where she started advocating for people like her by starting a club for Black women. When her political science professor told her she should go into politics, Shirley paid attention. She broke new ground and heard “Go home to your husband” and “You don’t belong here” when she was campaigning. But that didn’t stop her; in fact, it made her work harder until she became the first African American woman in Congress in 1968, where she ended up serving seven terms, and advocated for important bills such as the Equal Rights Amendment. She even sought the nomination for president of the United States in 1972." -- publisher
Themes & Content
- Genres
- Non-Fiction
- Central Theme Categories
- Biography/Autobiography
- Oppression & Resilience
- Content
- Activism/Social Justice Movements
- Diverse Families/Family Dynamics
- Governmental Relations
- Inequalities
- Race-Related
- Settings
- Americas
- Ethnicity
- Barbadian
- Caribbean
- Multiethnic
- Immigration Representation
- Children of Immigrants/Second Generation
- Gender Representation
- Girls/Women
- Race / Culture
- Black/African/African American
- Religion
- Christian
- Character Prominence
- Dominant Main
- Illustrator Lived Experience
- Illustrator shares race/culture with main characters