American fiction + African American authors + History and criticism
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American fiction + African American authors + History and criticism
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American fiction + African American authors + History and criticism
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Incoming Resources
- The emergence of Richard Wright, a study in literature and society
- Blacks in Eden, the African-American novel's first century, J. Lee Greene
- Black women novelists and the nationalist aesthetic, Madhu Dubey
- The way of the new world, the Black novel in America, [by] Addison Gayle, Jr
- The voices of Toni Morrison, Barbara Hill Rigney
- Black Orpheus, music in African American fiction from the Harlem Renaissance to Toni Morrison, edited by Saadi A. Simawe
- Critical essays on Toni Morrison's Beloved, edited by Barbara H. Solomon
- Jean Toomer and the Harlem Renaissance, edited by GenevieĢve Fabre and Michel Feith
- Inspiriting influences, tradition, revision, and Afro-American women's novels, Michael Awkward
- Tracing southern storytelling in black and white, Sarah Gilbreath Ford
- Neo-slave narratives, studies in the social logic of a literary form, Ashraf H.A. Rushdy
- The example of Richard Wright
- Jean Toomer, by Brian Joseph Benson & Mabel Mayle Dillard
- The Negro in American fiction, by Sterling Brown
- From folklore to fiction, a study of folk heroes and rituals in the Black American novel, H. Nigel Thomas
- Black women novelists, the development of a tradition, 1892-1976, Barbara Christian
- Critical essays on Richard Wright, [edited by] Yoshinobu Hakutani
- Richard Wright's art of tragedy, by Joyce Ann Joyce
- The Negro novelist, a discussion of the writings of American Negro novelists, 1940-1950, by Carl Milton Hughes [pseudonym]
- No crystal stair, visions of race and sex in Black women's fiction, Gloria Wade-Gayles
- Worrying the line, black women writers, lineage, and literary tradition, Cheryl A. Wall
- Langston Hughes, a study of the short fiction, Hans Ostrom
- Toni Morrison's The bluest eye, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Critical essays on Richard Wright's Native son, edited by Keneth Kinnamon
- Alice Walker and Zora Neale Hurston, the common bond, edited by Lillie P. Howard
- Alice Walker's The color purple, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Toni Morrison's Beloved, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Black resonance, iconic women singers and African American literature, Emily J. Lordi
- New dimensions of spirituality, a biracial and bicultural reading of the novels of Toni Morrison, Karla F.C. Holloway and Stephanie A. Demetrakopoulos
- From Richard Wright to Toni Morrison, ethics in modern & postmodern American narrative, Jeffrey J. Folks
- Aberrations in black, toward a queer of color critique, Roderick A. Ferguson
- Ralph Ellison, Mark Busby
- In the shadow of the Black beast, African American masculinity in the Harlem and Southern renaissances, Andrew B. Leiter
- Connecting times, the sixties in Afro-American fiction, Norman Harris
- Toni Morrison's Sula, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- The Negro novel in America, Robert Bone
- Wrestling angels into song, the fictions of Ernest J. Gaines and James Alan McPherson, Herman Beavers
- Black love matters, real talk on romance, being seen, and happily ever afters, edited by Jessica P. Pryde
- Toni Morrison, a critical companion, Missy Dehn Kubitschek
- Rereading the Harlem renaissance, race, class, and gender in the fiction of Jessie Fauset, Zora Neale Hurston, and Dorothy West, Sharon L. Jones
- Victims and heroes, racial violence in the African American novel, Jerry H. Bryant
- Richard Wright, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Contemporary African American fiction, the open journey, Robert Butler
- Remembering generations, race and family in contemporary African American fiction, Ashraf H.A. Rushdy
- Critical essays on Charles W. Chesnutt, edited by Joseph R. McElrath Jr
- The coupling convention, sex, text, and tradition in Black women's fiction, Ann duCille
- Negro voices in American fiction, [by] Hugh M. Gloster
- Invisible man, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Black male fiction and the legacy of Caliban, James W. Coleman
- African American mystery writers, a historical and thematic study, Frankie Y. Bailey