Slavery in literature
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Slavery in literature
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Slavery in literature
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Incoming Resources
- Subject of42
- Claiming the heritage, African-American women novelists and history, by Missy Dehn Kubitschek
- Uncle Tom's cabin and the abolitionist movement, Julie Carlson.
- The building of Uncle Tom's cabin, by E. Bruce Kirkham
- Arbitrary rule, slavery, tyranny, and the power of life and death, Mary Nyquist
- Harriet Beecher Stowe and American literature, Ellen Moers
- Romancing the shadow, Poe and race, edited by J. Gerald Kennedy & Liliane Weissberg
- Pioneers of the Black Atlantic, five slave narratives from the Enlightenment, 1772-1815, edited by Henry Louis Gates, Jr., William L. Andrews
- Uncle Tom's cabin, evil, affliction, and redemptive love, Josephine Donovan
- Women in chains, the legacy of slavery in Black women's fiction, Venetria K. Patton
- Shadow over the promised land, slavery, race, and violence in Melville's America, Carolyn L. Karcher
- Rethinking the slave narrative, slave marriage and the narratives of Henry Bibb and William and Ellen Craft, Charles J. Heglar
- In search of Hannah Crafts, critical essays on The Bondwoman's narrative, Henry Louis Gates, Jr., Hollis Robbins, editors
- Toni Morrison's Beloved, edited & with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Captivity & sentiment, cultural exchange in American literature, 1682-1861, Michelle Burnham
- Oroonoko, an authoritative text, historical backgrounds, criticism, Aphra Behn ; edited by Joanna Lipking
- Toni Morrison's Beloved, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- Unwelcome voices, subversive fiction in the Antebellum South, Paul Christian Jones
- Self-discovery and authority in Afro-American narrative, Valerie Smith
- The politics of sensibility, race, gender, and commerce in the sentimental novel, Markman Ellis
- Master plots, race and the founding of an American literature, 1787-1845, Jared Gardner
- Democratic discourses, the radical abolition movement and antebellum American literature, Michael Bennett
- The war on words, slavery, race, and free speech in American literature, Michael T. Gilmore
- Master plots, race and the founding of an American literature, 1787-1845, Jared Gardner
- Nat Turner before the bar of judgment, fictional treatments of the Southampton slave insurrection, Mary Kemp Davis
- The Stowe debate, rhetorical strategies in Uncle Tom's cabin, edited by Mason I. Lowance, Jr., Ellen E. Westbrook, R.C. De Prospo
- Hard facts, setting and form in the American novel, Philip Fisher
- Amalgamation!, race, sex, and rhetoric in the nineteenth-century American novel, James Kinney
- 12 questions about slave narratives, by Lois Sepahban
- From Shakespeare to Obama, a study in language, slavery and place, Jonathan Hart
- Against the unspeakable, complicity, the Holocaust, and slavery in America, Naomi Mandel
- Bound to respect, Antebellum narratives of black imprisonment, servitude, and bondage, 1816-1861, Keith Michael Green
- Figures in Black, words, signs, and the "racial" self, Henry Louis Gates, Jr
- Martin Delany, Frederick Douglass, and the politics of representative identity, Robert S. Levine
- Race, trauma, and home in the novels of Toni Morrison, Evelyn Jaffe Schreiber
- Bloom's literary themes, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom ; volume editor, Blake Hobby
- The inhuman race, the racial grotesque in American literature and culture, Leonard Cassuto
- Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's cabin, a casebook, edited by Elizabeth Ammons
- Toni Morrison, Beloved, edited by Carl Plasa
- Toni Morrison's Beloved, edited & with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- New essays on Uncle Tom's cabin, edited by Eric J. Sundquist
- Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's cabin, edited and with an introduction by Harold Bloom
- The origins of African American literature, 1680-1865, Dickson D. Bruce, Jr
Outgoing Resources
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