African American Review
View more issues: Spring 2000, Winter 2000, Fall 2000
Articles in Summer 2000 issue of African American Review
- "Relate Sexual to Historical": Race, Resistance, and Desire in Gayl Jones's Corregidora
by Ashraf H.A. Rushdy - Toni Morrison
by Tracy Curtis - Possessing the Self: Caribbean Identities in Zora Neale Hurston's Tell My Horse
by Annette Trefzer - Modern Medea: A Family Story of Slavery and Child-Murder from the Old South
by Edward Eden - Beyond Morrison and Walker: Looking Good and Looking Forward in Contemporary Black Women's Stories
by E. Shelley Reid - Circles of Sorrow, Lines of Struggle: The Novels of Toni Morrison
by Cynthia Dobbs - Body and Soul: Bob Kaufman's Golden Sardine
by T. J. Anderson, III - Paul Marchand, F. M. C
by Robert E. Fleming - Race, Rape, and Lynching: The Red Record of American Literature, 1890-1912
by Judith L. Stephens - The Healing
by Candice M. Jenkins - Prince Hall, Freemasonry, and Genealogy
by Joanna Brooks - What the Music Said: Black Popular Music and Black Popular Culture
by Edward Pavlic - Mosquito
by Laurie Champion - Road to Africa: Frederick Douglass's Rome
by Robert S. Levine - Barbara Ann Teer and the National Black Theatre: Transformational Forces in Harlem
by James V. Hatch - Two Cities
by Kimberly Ruffin - Trappings of Nationalism in Frederick Douglass's The Heroic Slave
by Krista Walter - The Young Paul Robeson
by Sterling Stuckey - "Shifting Spirits": Ancestral Constructs in the Postmodern Writing of John Edgar Wideman
by Sheri I. Hoem - Langston Hughes: The Contemporary Reviews
by Faith Berry - Storytelling and Democracy : A Conversation with John Edgar Wideman - in the Radical Sense
by Lisa Baker - Places of Silence, Journeys of Freedom: The Fiction of Paule Marshall
by Dorothy Hamer Denniston