Black Women Novelists: The Development of a Tradition, 1892-1976Surveying the evolution of images of black women in black fiction from 1892 to 1976, Christian analyzes novelists from Frances Harper through Zora Neale Hirston to Anne Perty. She traces the struggle of black female novelists to contend against the images that have defined them in American life and literature. Part II discusses three contemporary novelists -- Paule Marshall, Tom Morrison and Alice Walker. |
Contents
Shadows Uplifted | 3 |
The Rise and Fall of the Proper Mulatta | 35 |
The Tone of the Commonplace | 62 |
Copyright | |
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Black Women Novelists: The Development of a Tradition, 1892-1976 Barbara Christian No preview available - 1980 |
Common terms and phrases
abolitionists African Afro-American Alice Walker American antebellum Barbadian beauty become begins believe black women Bluest Eye Bournehills Breedlove Brownfield Browngirl Brownstones Cane chapter child Cholly Chosen Place Clotel community's create creative culture daughter death definition Deighton dream effect experience father Fauset feels Frances Harper girl give Grange Copeland guilt Gwendolyn Brooks Harlem Renaissance Harper Harriet Helga heroine human husband Ibid insists Iola LeRoy Josie killed lady land literature lives Lynne major characters mammy Margaret Marshall Marshall's Maud Martha Mem's Meridian Merle mind Morrison mother motif mulatta nature Negro Nella Larsen novel novelists past pattern Pecola race racism rape relationship ritual Ruth Saul Selina sexual Silla slave slavery social society South southern spirit stereotypes story struggle Sula Sula's survive theme things Toni Morrison tradition Truman understand Vere Walker white woman wife writers York Zora Neale Hurston