Race relations in literature
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Race relations in literature
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Race relations in literature
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Incoming Resources
- Reconstructing violence, the southern rape complex in film and literature, Deborah E. Barker
- Presenting Mildred D. Taylor, Chris Crowe
- Desegregating desire, race and sexuality in Cold War American literature, Tyler T. Schmidt
- Victims and heroes, racial violence in the African American novel, Jerry H. Bryant
- To kill a mockingbird, threatening boundaries /, Claudia Durst Johnson
- The Black American in books for children: readings in racism, edited and with an introd. by Donnarae MacCann and Gloria Woodard
- Tightrope walk, identity, survival and the corporate world in African American literature, James Robert Saunders
- Civil rights in the white literary imagination, innocence by association, Jonathan W. Gray
- Plantation airs, racial paternalism and the transformations of class in southern fiction, 1945-1971, Brannon Costello
- No crystal stair, visions of race and sex in Black women's fiction, Gloria Wade-Gayles
- Black and white women of the Old South, the peculiar sisterhood in American literature, Minrose C. Gwin
- Faulkner's "Negro", art and the southern context, Thadious M. Davis
- To wake the nations, race in the making of American literature, Eric J. Sundquist
- Interracialism, black-white intermarriage in American history, literature, and law, edited by Werner Sollors
- Love and death in the American novel, Leslie A. Fiedler
- The Jim dilemma, reading race in Huckleberry Finn, Jocelyn Chadwick-Joshua
- The common continent of men, racial equality in the writings of Herman Melville, [by] Edward S. Grejda
- Black on white, Black writers on what it means to be white, edited and with an introduction by David R. Roediger
- The Black presence in English literature, edited by David Dabydeen
- Plantation airs, racial paternalism and the transformations of class in southern fiction, 1945-1971, Brannon Costello
- Readings on "Cry, the beloved country", Estella Gerstung, book editor
- Tears of rage, the racial interface of modern American fiction : Faulkner, Wright, Pynchon, Morrison, Shelly Brivic
- The Stowe debate, rhetorical strategies in Uncle Tom's cabin, edited by Mason I. Lowance, Jr., Ellen E. Westbrook, R.C. De Prospo
- Cry, the beloved country, a novel of South Africa : [a study] /, Edward Callan
- Racing and (e)racing language, living with the color of our words, edited by Ellen J. Goldner and Safiya Henderson-Holmes
- Huck Finn's America, Mark Twain and the era that shaped his masterpiece, Andrew Levy
- Grant and Twain, the story of a friendship that changed America, Mark Perry
- What else but love?, the ordeal of race in Faulkner and Morrison, Philip M. Weinstein
- Female subjects in black and white, race, psychoanalysis, feminism, edited by Elizabeth Abel, Barbara Christian, Helene Moglen
- "Miscegenation", making race in America, Elise Lemire
- Black, white, and Huckleberry Finn, re-imagining the American dream, Elaine Mensh and Harry Mensh
- Blood at the root, lynching as American cultural nucleus, Jennie Lightweis-Goff
- African American writing, a literary approach, Werner Sollors
- Multiculturalism, roots and realities, edited by C. James Trotman
- Slavery and race in nineteenth-century Louisiana-French literature, John Maxwell Jones, Jr
- Nationalism and the color line in George W. Cable, Mark Twain, and William Faulkner, Barbara Ladd
- To kill a mockingbird, Harper Lee
- Satire or evasion?, Black perspectives on Huckleberry Finn, edited by James S. Leonard, Thomas A. Tenney, Thadious M. Davis
- The saddest words, William Faulkner's Civil War, Michael Gorra
- Go down, Moses, the miscegenation of time /, Arthur F. Kinney
- The myth of New Orleans in literature, dialogues of race and gender, Violet Harrington Bryan
- The racial problem in the works of Richard Wright and James Baldwin, Jean-François Gounard ; translated by Joseph J. Rodgers, Jr. ; foreword by Jean F. Béranger
- Mark Twain & the South, Arthur G. Pettit
- Broken silences, interviews with Black and White women writers, edited by Shirley M. Jordan
- Seems like murder here, southern violence and the blues tradition, Adam Gussow
- African American women playwrights confront violence, a critical study of nine dramatists, Patricia A. Young