African Americans in literature
Label
African Americans in literature
Name
African Americans in literature
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Incoming Resources
- Langston Hughes, critical perspectives past and present, edited by Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and K.A. Appiah
- Black women writers at work, edited by Claudia Tate ; foreword by Tillie Olsen
- The origin of others, Toni Morrison ; with a foreword by Ta-Nehisi Coates
- Playing in the dark, whiteness and the literary imagination, Toni Morrison
- Readings on A raisin in the sun, Lawrence Kappel, book editor
- Black/gay, the Harlem Renaissance, the protest era, and constructions of black gay identity in the 1980s and 90s, Simon Dickel
- From slave cabins to the White House, homemade citizenship in African American culture, Koritha Mitchell
- Black love matters, real talk on romance, being seen, and happy ever afters, edited by Jessica P. Pryde
- The Henry Louis Gates, Jr. reader, Henry Louis Gates, Jr. ; edited by Abby Wolf
- Toni Morrison for beginners, by Ron David ; illustrations by Dirk Shearer ; foreword by Elizabeth Beaulieu
- The ground on which I stand, August Wilson
- James Baldwin, artist on fire : a portrait, by W.J. Weatherby
- Low road, the life and legacy of Donald Goines, Eddie B. Allen, Jr. ; [foreword by DMX]
- Masterplots II, edited by Frank N. Magill
- Cane, authoritative text, contexts, criticism, Jean Toomer ; edited by Rudolph P Byrd, Emory University, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Harvard University
- Langston Hughes, a biography, Laurie F. Leach
- The saddest words:, William Faulkner's Civil War, Michael Gorra
- The evidence of things not said, James Baldwin and the promise of American democracy, Lawrie Balfour
- Shimmy shimmy shimmy like my sister Kate, looking at the Harlem Renaissance through poems, [edited by] Nikki Giovanni
- Fields watered with blood, critical essays on Margaret Walker
- Swing low, Black men writing, [compiled] by Rebecca Carroll ; introduction by Claude Brown
- Richard Wright, critical perspectives past and present, edited by Henry Louis Gates, Jr. and K.A. Appiah
- Violence in the Black imagination ;, essays and documents, [by] Ronald T. Takaki
- The Harlem Renaissance, a very short introduction, Cheryl A. Wall
- Toni Morrison, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Multicultural detective fiction, murder from the "other" side, edited by Adrienne Johnson Gosselin
- The collected essays of Ralph Ellison, edited and with an introduction by John F. Callahan ; preface by Saul Bellow
- The collected essays of Ralph Ellison, edited, with an introduction by John F. Callahan ; preface by Saul Bellow
- James Baldwin ;, a critical study
- John Henry, a bio-bibliography, Brett Williams
- Alice Walker, Maria Lauret
- Pimping fictions, African American crime literature and the untold story of Black pulp publishing, Justin Gifford
- Hip figures, a literary history of the Democratic Party, Michael Szalay
- The collected essays of Ralph Ellison, edited and with an introduction by John F. Callahan ; preface by Saul Bellow
- Readings on Maya Angelou, Mary E. Williams, book editor
- Cane, an authoritative text, backgrounds, criticism
- Race and the literary encounter, black literature from James Weldon Johnson to Percival Everett, Lesley Larkin
- Was Huck Black?, Mark Twain and African-American voices, Shelley Fisher Fishkin
- Give birth to brightness ;, a thematic study in neo-Black literature
- William Faulkner, the Yoknapatawpha world and black being, by Erskine Peters
- African American writing, a literary approach, Werner Sollors
- Toni Morrison For Beginners
- The poetry of the blues
- The blues detective, a study of African American detective fiction, Stephen F. Soitos
- Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins, Black daughter of the Revolution, Lois Brown
- Black writers, white publishers, marketplace politics in twentieth-century African American literature, John K. Young
- Street lit, representing the urban landscape, edited by Keenan Norris ; [foreword by Omar Tyree]
- The Cambridge companion to James Baldwin, edited by Michele Elam, Stanford University
- I know what the red clay looks like, the voice and vision of Black American women writers, by Rebecca Carroll
- The saddest words, William Faulkner's Civil War, Michael Gorra