Race in literature
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Race in literature
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Race in literature
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Incoming Resources
- Black chant, languages of African-American postmodernism, Aldon Lynn Nielsen
- Left of the color line, race, radicalism, and twentieth-century literature of the United States, edited by Bill V. Mullen and James Smethurst
- Race and time, American women's poetics from antislavery to racial modernity, by Janet Gray
- Criticism and the color line, desegrating American literary studies, edited by Henry B. Wonham
- Black writers, white publishers, marketplace politics in twentieth-century African American literature, John K. Young
- Mulattas and mestizas, representing mixed identities in the Americas, 1850-2000, Suzanne Bost
- The Black American in books for children, readings in racism, edited with an introduction by Donnarae MacCann and Gloria Woodard
- Lillian Hellman and August Wilson, dramatizing a new American identity, Margaret Booker
- Rereading the Harlem renaissance, race, class, and gender in the fiction of Jessie Fauset, Zora Neale Hurston, and Dorothy West, Sharon L. Jones
- The dark fantastic, race and the imagination from Harry Potter to The hunger games, Ebony Elizabeth Thomas
- Race and gender in the making of an African American literary tradition, Aimable Twagilimana
- Charles W. Chesnutt and the fictions of race, Dean McWilliams
- James Baldwin now, edited by Dwight A. McBride
- Blackness and value, seeing double, Lindon Barrett
- Remembering generations, race and family in contemporary African American fiction, Ashraf H.A. Rushdy
- Female subjects in black and white, race, psychoanalysis, feminism, edited by Elizabeth Abel, Barbara Christian, Helene Moglen
- Games of property, law, race, gender, and Faulkner's Go down, Moses, Thadious M. Davis
- Buying whiteness, race, culture, and identity from Columbus to hip hop, Gary Taylor
- The fugitive's properties, law and the poetics of possession, Stephen M. Best
- Whiteness in the novels of Charles W. Chesnutt, Matthew Wilson
- The mulatta and the politics of race, Teresa C. Zackodnik
- Zora Neale Hurston & American literary culture, M. Genevieve West
- Jump Jim Crow, lost plays, lyrics, and street prose of the first Atlantic popular culture, W.T. Lhamon, Jr
- "Color struck" under the gaze, ethnicity and the pathology of being in the plays of Johnson, Hurston, Childress, Hansberry, and Kennedy, Martha Gilman Bower
- The primate's dream, literature, race, and ethnicity in America, James W. Tuttleton
- The real negro, the question of authenticity in twentieth-century African American literature, Shelly Eversley
- The inhuman race, the racial grotesque in American literature and culture, Leonard Cassuto
- Negotiating difference, race, gender, and the politics of positionality, Michael Awkward
- Reading race in American poetry, an area of act, edited by Aldon Lynn Nielsen
- To hell and back, race and betrayal in the southern novel, Jeff Abernathy
- The white image in the Black mind, a study of African American literature, Jane Davis
- Converging stories, race, ecology, and environmental justice in American literature, Jeffrey Myers
- Revisiting racialized voice, African American ethos in language and literature, David G. Holmes
- Crossing the line, racial passing in twentieth-century U.S. literature and culture, Gayle Wald
- A sense of wonder, Samuel R. Delany, race, identity and difference, Jeffrey Allen Tucker
- Racial myths and masculinity in African American literature, Jeffrey B. Leak
- Playing in the dark, whiteness and the literary imagination, Toni Morrison
- Race-ing representation, voice, history, and sexuality, [edited by] Kostas Myrsiades and Linda Myrsiades
- Race and the literary encounter, black literature from James Weldon Johnson to Percival Everett, Lesley Larkin
- The passing figure, racial confusion in modern American literature, Juda Bennett
- Gender and race in antebellum popular culture, Sarah N. Roth
- The identifying fictions of Toni Morrison, modernist authenticity and postmodern blackness, John N. Duvall
- Unnatural selections, eugenics in American modernism and the Harlem Renaissance, Daylanne K. English
- Resistance and reformation in nineteenth-century African-American literature, Brown, Wilson, Jacobs, Delany, Douglass, and Harper, John Ernest
- Whitewashing America, material culture and race in the antebellum imagination, Bridget T. Heneghan
- Why To kill a mockingbird matters, what Harper Lee's book and the iconic American film mean to us today, Tom Santopietro
- Masculinist impulses, Toomer, Hurston, Black writing, and modernity, Nathan Grant
- Dislocating the color line, identity, hybridity, and singularity in African-American narrative, Samira Kawash
- The great white bard, how to love Shakespeare while talking about race, Farah Karim-Cooper
- Hip figures, a literary history of the Democratic Party, Michael Szalay
Outgoing Resources
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