In this Issue
published by
Johns Hopkins University Pressviewing issue
Volume 13, Number 2, Fall 2025Table of Contents
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View “If They Kill Me”: Frances Ellen Watkins Harper’s Black Boatmen and the Legacy of Civil War Heroism
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“If They Kill Me”: Frances Ellen Watkins Harper’s Black Boatmen and the Legacy of Civil War Heroism
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View Black National Housekeeping: Domesticity as Public Health in the Post-Reconstruction Works of Frances E. W. Harper
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Black National Housekeeping: Domesticity as Public Health in the Post-Reconstruction Works of Frances E. W. Harper
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View To “Every Hater of American Despotism”: Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and Correspondence in the Nineteenth-Century Black Press
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To “Every Hater of American Despotism”: Frances Ellen Watkins Harper and Correspondence in the Nineteenth-Century Black Press
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View “A Delicious Sense of Joy and Love”: On Centering Black Women Readers and Black Domestic Idealism in Frances E. W. Harper’s Iola Leroy
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“A Delicious Sense of Joy and Love”: On Centering Black Women Readers and Black Domestic Idealism in Frances E. W. Harper’s Iola Leroy
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Previous Issue
| ISSN | 2166-7438 |
|---|---|
| Print ISSN | 2166-742X |
| Launched on MUSE | 2026-03-07 |
| Open Access | No |
Copyright
Copyright © C19: The Society of Nineteenth-Century Americanists




