This dissertation examines the relationship of the American publishing industry to Black American writers, with special focus on the re-emergence of the street lit sub-genre. Understanding this much maligned sub-genre is necessary if we are to understand the evolution of African-American literature, especially into the current era. Literature is best understood as a combinative process, produced not only by writers but various mediating figures and processes besides, at the combined levels of content, commercial production and distribution, and social and literary context. Therefore, offered here is a critical intervention into what has until now largely been a moralistic and polarizing high art/low art argument by considering street lit wi...
Street lit novels are reemerging in popularity. Their content is as controversial as it was in the l...
This dissertation is about a group of African American inner-city public librarians who, over the co...
The purpose of this short provocation is to study Black literature beyond the grasp of American lite...
Emerging in the mid-1990s, Street lit’, or hip-hop literature undeniably contributed to the boom in ...
ABSTRACT This dissertation examines the generations of popular black writers that initiated the pro...
“Stories Written on Concrete: Understanding and Re-imagining Street Lit and Culture, 1990-2007,” coa...
This dissertation examines interactions between U.S. writers of color and the predominantly white pu...
This dissertation examines the various ways in which pop-cultural illustrations of the “bad nigger” ...
In my dissertation, I explore the ways in which racial identity is made complex through various onlo...
This paper contributes to the conversation of race/publishing by concentrating on black women’s lite...
This dissertation explores African American cultural products that pose competing narratives of blac...
My dissertation focusing on black women's literature explores how the dynamic relationships of black...
This dissertation examines the relationship between African American literature and performance duri...
This dissertation examines the relationship between African American literature and performance duri...
This dissertation focuses on recent instances of mixed race literature in American culture such as D...
Street lit novels are reemerging in popularity. Their content is as controversial as it was in the l...
This dissertation is about a group of African American inner-city public librarians who, over the co...
The purpose of this short provocation is to study Black literature beyond the grasp of American lite...
Emerging in the mid-1990s, Street lit’, or hip-hop literature undeniably contributed to the boom in ...
ABSTRACT This dissertation examines the generations of popular black writers that initiated the pro...
“Stories Written on Concrete: Understanding and Re-imagining Street Lit and Culture, 1990-2007,” coa...
This dissertation examines interactions between U.S. writers of color and the predominantly white pu...
This dissertation examines the various ways in which pop-cultural illustrations of the “bad nigger” ...
In my dissertation, I explore the ways in which racial identity is made complex through various onlo...
This paper contributes to the conversation of race/publishing by concentrating on black women’s lite...
This dissertation explores African American cultural products that pose competing narratives of blac...
My dissertation focusing on black women's literature explores how the dynamic relationships of black...
This dissertation examines the relationship between African American literature and performance duri...
This dissertation examines the relationship between African American literature and performance duri...
This dissertation focuses on recent instances of mixed race literature in American culture such as D...
Street lit novels are reemerging in popularity. Their content is as controversial as it was in the l...
This dissertation is about a group of African American inner-city public librarians who, over the co...
The purpose of this short provocation is to study Black literature beyond the grasp of American lite...