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- Digital Price: $26.00 USD (All sales final)
- Early American Literature
- The University of North Carolina Press
- issue
- Volume 57, Number 3, 2022
- Notes on Contributors
- Twelfth Biennial Conference: Common Reading Initiative by Honorée Jeffers (review)
- Walter E. Washington Convention Center, and Online by Marriott Marquis (review)
- Codex Sierra: A Nahuatl-Mixtec Book of Accounts from Colonial Mexico ed. by Kevin Terraciano (review)
- The Haiti Reader: History, Culture, Politics ed. by Laurent Dubois et al. (review)
- Boneyarn by David Mills (review)
- The Mo'olelo Hawai'i of Davida Malo: Hawaiian Text and Translation by Davida Malo (review)
- Resources for Early American Studies
- Beyond the Boundaries of Childhood: African American Children in the Antebellum North by Crystal Lynn Webster (review)
- The Course of God's Providence: Religion, Health, and the Body in Early America by Philippa Koch (review)
- Liminal Whiteness in Early US Fiction by Hannah Lauren Murray (review)
- Complexion of Empire in Natchez: Race and Slavery in the Mississippi Borderlands by Christian Pinnen, and: Blurring the Lines of Race and Freedom: Mulattoes and Mixed Bloods in English Colonial America by A. B. Wilkinson (review)
- African American Literature in Transition, 1800–1830: Volume 2 ed. by Jasmine Nichole Cobb (review)
- Infamous Bodies: Early Black Women's Celebrity and the Afterlives of Rights by Samantha Pinto, and: Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia by Sabrina Strings (review)
- Medieval America: Feudalism and Liberalism in Nineteenth-Century U.S. Culture by Robert Yusef Rabiee (review)
- Stolen: Five Free Boys Kidnapped into Slavery and Their Astonishing Odyssey Home by Richard Bell (review)
- The Word in the Wilderness: Popular Piety and the Manuscript Arts in Early Pennsylvania by Alexander Lawrence Ames (review)
- Histories of Contested Nation-Building in Early Transatlantic Print Culture
- Accounting for Black Women's Freedom in Early America
- Early American and Atlantic Jewish History: Currents and Crosscurrents
- Reading Politics through Song, Past and Present
- Archives: Anonymous Wheatley and the Archive in Plain Sight: A Tentative Attribution of Nine Published Poems, 1773–1775
- Archives: "Sister, Wasn't It Good": Archival Gestures, Mutual Witness, and the 1973 Phillis Wheatley Poetry Festival
- Love as Method: Teaching Phillis Wheatley Peters and Honorée Fanonne Jeffers
- On Being Brought from Africa to America to London: Teaching Phillis Wheatley in the Former Heart of Empire
- Teaching Phillis Wheatley Peters through Black Liberation Theology
- Loving Blackness across Arts and Sciences
- Reflections on "Phillis in Prison"
- The First SEA Common Reading Initiative, or, How to Break Down Old and New Barriers to Teaching Phillis Wheatley Peters
- Reading and Teaching Phillis Wheatley Peters in Boston
- Preface to "Wheatley Pedagogies: A Forum on Teaching"
- "The World Is a Severe Schoolmaster": Phillis Wheatley's Poetry of Domination and Submission
- "On Imagination" and Material Culture
- "I, Young in Life": Phillis Wheatley and the Invention of American Childhood
- Phillis Wheatley, White Victimhood, and Black Belonging in the Age of The 1776 Report
- Provocation: Diplomatic Negotiations in Phillis Wheatley's Ambassadorial "On Being Brought from Africa to America"
- Inventions: Phillis, heavy and I, naive
- Inventions: The Grapevine
- Inventions: Lost Poem #1: Phillis Wheatley, Boston, to Obour Tanner, Boston
- Inventions: Upon Reading "A Hymn to the Evening" by Phillis Wheatley
- Special Issue Introduction: "Dear Sister: Phillis Wheatley's Futures"
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