The Next House: A Fragmented Sequence treats the effects of an 1848 court case, later used as precedent for the Fugitive Slave Law, concerning residents of the author’s hometown who helped a formerly enslaved family escape to Canada. The collection investigates how the story of a confrontation between slave owners and abolitionist-minded townspeople was told to create and police community identity over the next 150 years. The dissertation uses excerpts of the court case and historical newspapers, text from state historical markers, interviews with residents, the author’s personal experiences, and ekphrastic treatment of contemporary visual art to interrogate race and power in a predominantly white, rural Midwestern space. The Next House com...
Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, black southerners in the United States engaged in the series of nonv...
This dissertation presents an account of fugitivity in poetic form as well as political practice. In...
This dissertation, Not To Repeat History: Racialization and Combinatory Textuality in Contemporary A...
This dissertation explores the historical and contemporary interactions between blackness and the st...
This dissertation examines the Civil Rights Movement through the experiences of primarily two Africa...
This dissertation explores the imbrication of race, gender, and place in the context of American Sou...
My dissertation, “‘A House Is Not a Home”: African American Literature and the Problematic Significa...
This dissertation articulates the ways in which black (e)migration to the territorial frontier chall...
This dissertation proposes a critical and material reappraisal of Southern land, by examining the re...
This dissertation examines the relationship between race and punishment in US culture from the post-...
The Present Elsewhere investigates the aesthetic traits and political implications of displacement i...
This thesis is a collection of poetry. THE ROOT HOUSE AND OTHER POEMS is a collection of poems that ...
textThis dissertation uses primarily archaeological evidence to interpret how enslaved women and me...
My dissertation examines the origins of the perception of black people as criminally predisposed by ...
The study of black southern women has expanded rapidly in recent years, driven largely by research i...
Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, black southerners in the United States engaged in the series of nonv...
This dissertation presents an account of fugitivity in poetic form as well as political practice. In...
This dissertation, Not To Repeat History: Racialization and Combinatory Textuality in Contemporary A...
This dissertation explores the historical and contemporary interactions between blackness and the st...
This dissertation examines the Civil Rights Movement through the experiences of primarily two Africa...
This dissertation explores the imbrication of race, gender, and place in the context of American Sou...
My dissertation, “‘A House Is Not a Home”: African American Literature and the Problematic Significa...
This dissertation articulates the ways in which black (e)migration to the territorial frontier chall...
This dissertation proposes a critical and material reappraisal of Southern land, by examining the re...
This dissertation examines the relationship between race and punishment in US culture from the post-...
The Present Elsewhere investigates the aesthetic traits and political implications of displacement i...
This thesis is a collection of poetry. THE ROOT HOUSE AND OTHER POEMS is a collection of poems that ...
textThis dissertation uses primarily archaeological evidence to interpret how enslaved women and me...
My dissertation examines the origins of the perception of black people as criminally predisposed by ...
The study of black southern women has expanded rapidly in recent years, driven largely by research i...
Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, black southerners in the United States engaged in the series of nonv...
This dissertation presents an account of fugitivity in poetic form as well as political practice. In...
This dissertation, Not To Repeat History: Racialization and Combinatory Textuality in Contemporary A...