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- Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers
- University of Nebraska Press
- Article
- Twenty-First-Century African American Literary Studies as Movement Volume 31, Number 1, 2014, pp. 70-72
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $34.00 USD.
This issue contains 28 articles in total
- Introduction
- Introduction
- Editor’s Note
- Domestic Subjects: Gender, Citizenship, and Law in Native American Literature by Beth M. Piatote (review)
- The Selected Letters of Elizabeth Stoddard Edited by Jennifer Putzi and Elizabeth Stockton (review)
- To Fight Aloud Is Very Brave: American Poetry and the Civil War by Faith Barrett (review)
- E. D. E. N. Southworth: Recovering a Nineteenth-Century Popular Novelist Edited by Melissa J. Homestead and Pamela T. Washington (review)
- Philosophies of Sex: Critical Essays on The Hermaphrodite Edited by Renée Bergland and Gary Williams (review)
- Childish Things: A Review of Robin Bernstein’s Racial Innocence, Kyla Wazana Tompkins’s Racial Indigestion, and Courtney Weikle-Mills’s Imaginary Citizens
- Twentieth-Anniversary Reflections on The Culture of Sentiment: Race, Gender, and Sentimentality in Nineteenth-Century America edited by Shirley Samuels (review)
- Twentieth-Anniversary Reflections on Written by Herself: Literary Production by African American Women, 1746–1892 by Frances Smith Foster (review)
- Thirty-Fifth-Anniversary Reflections on Woman’s Fiction: A Guide to Novels by and about Women in America, 1820–1870 by Nina Baym (review)
- Serving New York’s Black City
- Investing in Literature: Ernestine Rose and the Harlem Branch Public Library of the 1920s
- Excerpts from “Drinking Jack” (1881)
- Mary Dwinell Chellis Lund (1826–1891)
- Whiteness Visible
- Race and the Mind/Body Problem
- Twenty-First-Century African American Literary Studies as Movement
- Out of the Kitchen of the House of Fiction
- Do You Have Any Skin in the Game?
- Better a Bloody Shovel Than Ambivalence
- “Memorials of Exemplary Women Are Peculiarly Interesting”: Female Biography in Early National America
- Phillis Wheatley on Friendship
- Interpretive Challenges Posed by the Gendered Performances of Early American Female Criminals
- Looking for Stories of Inarticulate Women
- States of Recollection: How Seventeenth-Century Women Thought about Recovery and the Atlantic World
- Finding Place to Speak: Sarah Winnemucca’s Rhetorical Practices in Disciplinary Spaces
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