The past five years have seen the publication of several works in the field of black classicism, from Michele Valerie Ronnick’s edition of the Autobiography of the African American clas-sicist William Sanders Scarborough, published in 2005, to Barbara Goff and Michael Simpson’s Crossroads in the Black Aegean, Robert O’Meally’s Romare Bearden: A Black Odyssey, and Tracey Walters ’ African American Literature and the Classicist Tradition, all published in 2007. That these works should have been published roughly contemporaneously is notable in and of itself, but more exciting still is the fact that their publication represents a critical mass in the field of black classicism, at once consolidating the field and signalling new directions for f...
Cheryl Wall\u27s edited volume, Changing Our Own Words, is comprised of the proceedings of a confere...
In her Preface to this study, Lean\u27tin Bracks describes her purpose as being to describe a mod...
For the past 15 years the rapidly advancing field of World Literature has revitalized comparative li...
The eighteenth century, a growing consensus among historians suggests, was a crucial period in the e...
In 1925 Professor Alain Locke argued in The New Negro that the Negro was moving forward under the c...
Numerous and diverse agendas have competed for consideration in attempts to establish and set the pa...
Part of the Indiana University series on Blacks in the Diaspora, this book brings together ten essay...
The seven carefully documented essays in literary criticism in this excellent short volume are possi...
Review of a recently published collection of the complete writings of Suzanne C<span class="st">ésai...
These biographical profiles of well-known and not so well-known African Americans are presented from...
The three books reviewed here--Henry Goldschmidt’s Race and Religion among the Chosen Peoples of Cro...
For some time now it has been fashionable when reviewing any sort of anthology to focus critical len...
This book is a collection of articles from the Black College Conference held at Harvard University i...
According to Bell, his book is a comprehensive sociopsychological, sociocultural interpretive histo...
Review essay of the following books: Many Thousands Gone: The First Two Centuries of Slavery in Nort...
Cheryl Wall\u27s edited volume, Changing Our Own Words, is comprised of the proceedings of a confere...
In her Preface to this study, Lean\u27tin Bracks describes her purpose as being to describe a mod...
For the past 15 years the rapidly advancing field of World Literature has revitalized comparative li...
The eighteenth century, a growing consensus among historians suggests, was a crucial period in the e...
In 1925 Professor Alain Locke argued in The New Negro that the Negro was moving forward under the c...
Numerous and diverse agendas have competed for consideration in attempts to establish and set the pa...
Part of the Indiana University series on Blacks in the Diaspora, this book brings together ten essay...
The seven carefully documented essays in literary criticism in this excellent short volume are possi...
Review of a recently published collection of the complete writings of Suzanne C<span class="st">ésai...
These biographical profiles of well-known and not so well-known African Americans are presented from...
The three books reviewed here--Henry Goldschmidt’s Race and Religion among the Chosen Peoples of Cro...
For some time now it has been fashionable when reviewing any sort of anthology to focus critical len...
This book is a collection of articles from the Black College Conference held at Harvard University i...
According to Bell, his book is a comprehensive sociopsychological, sociocultural interpretive histo...
Review essay of the following books: Many Thousands Gone: The First Two Centuries of Slavery in Nort...
Cheryl Wall\u27s edited volume, Changing Our Own Words, is comprised of the proceedings of a confere...
In her Preface to this study, Lean\u27tin Bracks describes her purpose as being to describe a mod...
For the past 15 years the rapidly advancing field of World Literature has revitalized comparative li...