textFrom its distinction during the 1920s as the hub of black culture and commerce in America to its later reputation as the unmitigated manifestation of inner city decay, Harlem evokes an urban palimpsest, a lived geographic space onto which collective desires and fears are written and overwritten. Because of the symbolic place Harlem occupies in the national imaginary, my dissertation focuses on this central public site. Jay-Walking in the City: Violence Against Women, Urban Space, and Pedestrian Acts of Resistance advocates an investigation of textual histories of abusive domestic experiences in this neighborhood in order to underline the importance of public spheres in redressing trauma. As part of the larger archive of Harlem literatur...
At the turn of the century, commercial, and residential development picked up speed and began to tra...
The Brick: Newark’s Artistic Inquiry into Urban Crisis reads Newark through its artists, through the...
This dissertation examines how contemporary African American women writers have used the novel of se...
textFrom its distinction during the 1920s as the hub of black culture and commerce in America to its...
This dissertation uses New York City’s July 1964 rebellions in Central Harlem and Bedford-Stuyvesant...
The Harlem Renaissance, also known at the Negro Renaissance and the New Negro Movement, was a revolu...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [184]-190)This study provides the first extensive analysi...
This dissertation focuses on narratives of Black girlhood in late twentieth-century African American...
“Jezebel By Another Name: Black Women, Carceral Geography, and the Practice of Urban Marronage in Ch...
This dissertation examines how direct and vicarious victimization shape the bereavement, coping stra...
My dissertation focusing on black women's literature explores how the dynamic relationships of black...
This thesis is a comparison of four different novels by four different authors: Nella Larsen s Passi...
This dissertation is about an impoverished, African American neighborhood in Oakland, California whe...
This dissertation examines the ways in which Ferréz Sacolinha, Junot Díaz and Ernesto Quiñonez ne...
This dissertation examines how contemporary African American women writers have used the novel of se...
At the turn of the century, commercial, and residential development picked up speed and began to tra...
The Brick: Newark’s Artistic Inquiry into Urban Crisis reads Newark through its artists, through the...
This dissertation examines how contemporary African American women writers have used the novel of se...
textFrom its distinction during the 1920s as the hub of black culture and commerce in America to its...
This dissertation uses New York City’s July 1964 rebellions in Central Harlem and Bedford-Stuyvesant...
The Harlem Renaissance, also known at the Negro Renaissance and the New Negro Movement, was a revolu...
Includes bibliographical references (pages [184]-190)This study provides the first extensive analysi...
This dissertation focuses on narratives of Black girlhood in late twentieth-century African American...
“Jezebel By Another Name: Black Women, Carceral Geography, and the Practice of Urban Marronage in Ch...
This dissertation examines how direct and vicarious victimization shape the bereavement, coping stra...
My dissertation focusing on black women's literature explores how the dynamic relationships of black...
This thesis is a comparison of four different novels by four different authors: Nella Larsen s Passi...
This dissertation is about an impoverished, African American neighborhood in Oakland, California whe...
This dissertation examines the ways in which Ferréz Sacolinha, Junot Díaz and Ernesto Quiñonez ne...
This dissertation examines how contemporary African American women writers have used the novel of se...
At the turn of the century, commercial, and residential development picked up speed and began to tra...
The Brick: Newark’s Artistic Inquiry into Urban Crisis reads Newark through its artists, through the...
This dissertation examines how contemporary African American women writers have used the novel of se...