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- Digital Price: $12.00 USD (All sales final)
- The Southern Literary Journal
- The University of North Carolina Press
- Article
- Birth in the Briar Patch: Charles W. Chesnutt and the Problem of Racial Identity Volume 41, Number 2, Spring 2009, pp. 1-20
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $29.00 USD.
This issue contains 13 articles in total
- Contributors
- Re-visioning Women and Place
- Discourses of Desire: Uncovering Discursive Spaces of Race and Gender in Modern Southern Fiction
- Between Martyrdom and Machismo: Black Men and the American South (review)
- The Poor, Dirty South
- “It Wasn’t God Who Made Honky-Tonk Angels”: Musical Salvation in Dorothy Allison’s Bastard Out of Carolina
- “The Most Ordinary Life Imaginable”: Cold War Culture in Walker Percy’s The Moviegoer
- The Utopian Function of Affect in Carson McCullers’s The Member of the Wedding and The Ballad of the Sad Café
- Returning South: Reading Culture in James Agee’s Let Us Now Praise Famous Men and Zora Neale Hurston’s Mules and Men
- Skunked on the New York Cotton Exchange: What Really Happens to Jason Compson in The Sound and the Fury
- Chester Himes’s The Third Generation: A Dystopic Domestic Novel
- The Politics of Self-Identity in Paul Laurence Dunbar’s The Sport of the Gods
- Birth in the Briar Patch: Charles W. Chesnutt and the Problem of Racial Identity
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