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- Digital Price: $19.00 USD (All sales final)
- Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers
- University of Nebraska Press
- Review
- Writing through Jane Crow: Race and Gender Politics in African American Literature by Ayesha K. Hardison (review) Volume 32, Number 2, 2015, pp. 327-329
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 25 articles in total
- Introduction
- Editor’s Note
- Writing through Jane Crow: Race and Gender Politics in African American Literature by Ayesha K. Hardison (review)
- Making Noise, Making News: Suffrage Print Culture and U.S. Modernism by Mary Chapman (review)
- Sacramental Shopping: Louisa May Alcott, Edith Wharton, and the Spirit of Modern Consumerism by Sarah Way Sherman (review)
- Southern Women Novelists and the Civil War: Trauma and Collective Memory in the American Literary Tradition since 1861 by Sharon Talley (review)
- Over the River and through the Wood: An Anthology of Nineteenth-Century American Children’s Poetry ed. by Karen L. Kilcup, Angela Sorby (review)
- Elizabeth Stuart Phelps: Selected Tales, Essays, and Poems ed. by Elizabeth Duquette, Cheryl Tevlin (review)
- Panic Fiction: Women and Antebellum Economic Crisis by Mary Templin (review)
- Nineteenth-Century American Women Write Religion: Lived Theologies and Literature ed. by Mary McCartin Wearn (review)
- Cherokee Sister: The Collected Writings of Catharine Brown, 1818–1823 ed. by Theresa Strouth Gaul (review)
- One Colonial Woman’s World: The Life and Writings of Mehetabel Chandler Coit by Michelle Marchetti Coughlin (review)
- The New Woman
- Barbara E. Pope (1854–1908)
- Jessie Fauset’s Not-So-New Negro Womanhood: The Harlem Renaissance, the Long Nineteenth Century, and Legacies of Feminine Representation
- Entomology, Fiction, Intoxication: Annie Trumbull Slosson’s Narratives of Obsession
- Being In and Not Among: The Anti-Imperial Impulses of Helen Hunt Jackson’s Bits of Travel at Home
- “Outré-mer adventures”: Caroline Kirkland’s A New Home, Who’ll Follow? and the Maritime World
- Family History as Personal Narrative: Writing Black Gotham
- Martha Ballard’s Republic and Our Haunted Histories
- Historical Scholarship and the “Personal Guise”
- Negotiating the Personal and the Academic
- Feminism, Theology, and the Personal in American Studies
- Looking at a Candid Photograph of Myself
- Personal History: Martha Ballard, Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, and the Scholarly Guise in Early American Women’s Studies
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