Includes bibliographical references (p. 57-59)This thesis examines the post-emancipation formation of African American identity, masculinity, and authenticity through the white skinned, multiracial body of T. Thomas Fortune, the premier African American newspaper editor of the Gilded Age and Progressive Era. It argues that multiracial African American men like Fortune were central to the collective construction of an authentic black male identity between 1883 and 1907. Often functioning as foil characters in elaborate racial performances which characterized them as less authentic, less masculine, and more subject to racial disloyalty, Fortune and others who visually presented a racially ambiguous body challenged this narrowly drawn and inte...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of English, 2014.Myths about the racial other have b...
Focusing on black identity construction, the first three chapters of The Rhetoric of Race: Toward a ...
This thesis examines the ways in which black visual artists Roy DeCarava, Gordon Parks, Jean-Michel ...
My dissertation examines the ways in which formerly enslaved black men constructed their gender iden...
In this thesis I argue that the early conceptualization of American identity was achieved through th...
identity among African Americans in South Carolina during Reconstruction. Moving from the ba...
After historicizing the politics of racial representation in the slave narrative, this article consi...
My senior project will be based on the notion of the black dandy specifically focusing on Harlem in ...
Historically, and in literature, the concept of black masculinity is often viewed from a Euro-Americ...
Under the shadow of slavery, skin color played a vital role in determining social relations within c...
After historicizing the politics of racial representation in the slave narrative, this article consi...
This project uses the body as a site to examine the complex relationship between science, culture, a...
In an effort to fill a lacuna in the historiography of black abolitionists and gender studies, this ...
The growing literature that addresses transnational relationships between African Americans and Afri...
This dissertation asks how the end of slavery affected ideas of community belonging and social autho...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of English, 2014.Myths about the racial other have b...
Focusing on black identity construction, the first three chapters of The Rhetoric of Race: Toward a ...
This thesis examines the ways in which black visual artists Roy DeCarava, Gordon Parks, Jean-Michel ...
My dissertation examines the ways in which formerly enslaved black men constructed their gender iden...
In this thesis I argue that the early conceptualization of American identity was achieved through th...
identity among African Americans in South Carolina during Reconstruction. Moving from the ba...
After historicizing the politics of racial representation in the slave narrative, this article consi...
My senior project will be based on the notion of the black dandy specifically focusing on Harlem in ...
Historically, and in literature, the concept of black masculinity is often viewed from a Euro-Americ...
Under the shadow of slavery, skin color played a vital role in determining social relations within c...
After historicizing the politics of racial representation in the slave narrative, this article consi...
This project uses the body as a site to examine the complex relationship between science, culture, a...
In an effort to fill a lacuna in the historiography of black abolitionists and gender studies, this ...
The growing literature that addresses transnational relationships between African Americans and Afri...
This dissertation asks how the end of slavery affected ideas of community belonging and social autho...
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Rochester. Dept. of English, 2014.Myths about the racial other have b...
Focusing on black identity construction, the first three chapters of The Rhetoric of Race: Toward a ...
This thesis examines the ways in which black visual artists Roy DeCarava, Gordon Parks, Jean-Michel ...