Black people in literature
Label
Black people in literature
Name
Black people in literature
Actions
Incoming Resources
- Subject of42
- Scars of conquest/masks of resistance, the invention of cultural identities in African, African-American, and Caribbean drama, Tejumola Olaniyan
- Black theatre, ritual performance in the African diaspora, edited by Paul Carter Harrison, Victor Leo Walker II, Gus Edwards
- Britain's black past, edited and with an introduction by Gretchen H. Gerzina
- Motherlands, black women's writing from Africa, the Caribbean and South Asia, Susheila Nasta, editor
- Anatomy of blackness, science and slavery in an age of enlightenment, Andrew S. Curran
- Colonialism and race in Luso-Hispanic literature, Jerome C. Branche
- A history of Black and Asian writing in Britain, C.L. Innes
- Black British writing, [edited] by R. Victoria Arana and Lauri Ramey
- Shakespeare, Othello, Fenella and Gamini Salgado
- The myth of Aunt Jemima, representations of race and region, Diane Roberts
- Being and blackness in Latin America, uprootedness and improvisation, Patricia D. Fox
- The Methuen Drama book of post-black plays, edited by Harry J. Elam and Douglas A. Jones
- The black radical tragic, performance, aesthetics, and the unfinished Haitian Revolution, Jeremy Matthew Glick
- AfroCuba, an anthology of Cuban writing on race, politics and culture, edited by Pedro PĂ©rez Sarduy and Jean Stubbs
- Playing in the dark, whiteness and the literary imagination, Toni Morrison
- Black British writing, [edited] by R. Victoria Arana and Lauri Ramey
- Moving beyond boundaries, edited by Carole Boyce Davies and 'Molara Ogundipe-Leslie. Vol.1, International Dimensions of Black Women's Writing
- Sisters and strangers, an introduction to contemporary feminist fiction, Patricia Duncker
- The Black presence in English literature, edited by David Dabydeen
- Shakespeare without women, representing gender and race on the Renaissance stage, Dympna Callaghan
- Pathfinder, Black awakening in The arrivants of Edward Kamau Brathwaite, by Gordon Rohlehr
- Afro-Hispanic review, publication of the Afro-Hispanic Institute
- Black British literature, novels of transformation, Mark Stein
- Britain's black past, edited and with an introduction by Gretchen H. Gerzina
- Black subjects, identity formation in the contemporary narrative of slavery, Arlene R. Keizer
- Dwelling places, postwar Black British writing, James Procter
- Things of darkness, economies of race and gender in early modern England, Kim F. Hall
- Subject to others, British women writers and colonial slavery, 1670-1834, Moira Ferguson
- Discrepant engagement, dissonance, cross-culturality, and experimental writing, Nathaniel Mackey
- Becoming human, matter and meaning in an antiblack world, Zakiyyah Iman Jackson
- Reimagining black art and criminology, a new criminological imagination, Martin Glynn
- Write Black, write British, from post colonial to Black British literature, edited by Kadija Sesay
- Black and Asian theatre in Britain, a history, Colin Chambers
- Shakespeare, race, and colonialism, Ania Loomba
- "Black" British aesthetics today, edited by R. Victoria Arana
- Early Black British writing, Olaudah Equiano, Mary Prince, and others : selected texts with introduction, critical essays, edited by Alan Richardson, Debbie Lee
- I am Black/White/Yellow, an introduction to the Black body in Europe, edited by Joan Anim-Addo and Suzanne Scafe
- Black subjects, identity formation in the contemporary narrative of slavery, Arlene R. Keizer
- Haunted life, visual culture and Black modernity, David Marriott
- Black women, writing, and identity, migrations of the subject, Carole Boyce Davies
- Characters of blood, black heroism in the transatlantic imagination, Celeste-Marie Bernier
- Slavery and the Romantic imagination, Debbie Lee