African American Review
View more issues: Spring-Summer 2005, Winter 2005, Spring 2006
Articles in Fall 2005 issue of African American Review
- Lloyd Richards: reminiscence of a theatre life and beyond
by N. Graham Nesmith - Johnnie M. Stover. Rhetoric and Resistance in Black Women's Autobiography
by Chris Bell - Cheryl J. Fish. Black and White Women's Travel Narratives: Antebellum Explorations
by Edlie Wong - Katrina: a matrix of stories
by Jerry W. Ward, Jr. - Sections of an orange
by Anton Nimblett - Whose will be done?: self-determination in Pauline Hopkins's Hagar's daughter
by Susan Hays Bussey - Mary E. Weems. Public Education and Imagination-Intellect: I Speak from the Wound in My Mouth
by Meiko Negishi - James Weldon Johnson's Black Manhattan and the Kingdom of American Culture
by Michael Nowlin - Harry J. Elam, Jr. The Past as Present in the Drama of August Wilson
by Yuko Kurahashi - Haakayoo N. Zoggyie. In Search of the Fathers: The Poetics of Disalienation in the Narrative of Two Contemporary Afro-Hispanic Writers
by Mar Gallego - The Zombie in/as the text: Zora Neale Hurston's Tell My Horse
by Amy Fass Emery - Jim McWilliams, ed. Passing the Three Gates: Interviews with Charles Johnson
by Marc C. Conner - Stacy I. Morgan. Rethinking Social Realism: African American Art and Literature, 1930-1953
by BioDun J. Ogundayo - Creating Ethnography: Zora Neale Hurston and Lydia Cabrera
by Lynda Hoffman-Jeep - Lee Brown, ed. African Philosophy: New and Traditional Perspectives
by Polycarp Ikuenobe - Invisible Man and African American radicalism in World War II
by Christopher Z. Hobson - John F. Callahan, ed. Ralph Ellison's Invisible Man: A Casebook
by Robert Butler - Inheriting the criminalized black body: race, gender, and slavery in Eva's Man
by Hershini Bhana Young - The Other side of paradise: Toni Morrison's making of mythic history
by Marni Gauthier - Creating the beloved community: religion, race, and nation in Toni Morrison's paradise
by Channette Romero - Jonathan D. Martin. Divided Mastery: Slave Hiring in the American South
by Patricia E. Clark - "As if I had entered a paradise": fugitive slave narratives and cross-border literary history
by Nancy Kang