Race Literature

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A01=Cynthia Lee Patterson
African Methodist Episcopal denomination
Author_Cynthia Lee Patterson
Ballard Normal School
Benjamin Tucker Tanner
Caroline E. Pemberton
Category=JBCT
Category=JBSF1
Category=JBSL1
Category=NHTB
criminality
E. Marie Carter
education advocacy
Elizabeth McDonald
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
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eq_society-politics
female intellectualism
forthcoming
Frances Joseph Gaudet
Frazelia Campbell
Gilded Age
Green Book
Henrietta Cordelia Ray
Hightower T. Kealing
Ida Joyce Jackson
Intersectionality
Josephine Turpin Washington Silone Yates
Julia A. Gaines
Kealing's Appeal
Lena Mason
Leonora Beck Ellis
Levi Coppin
Lucy Hubert
Mary L. Arnett E. Lee A. Campbell Handy
Mississippi Industrial College
Mound Bayou
nineteenth 19th century periodicals magazine covers religious publications
Philadelphia publishing houses
pre-Harlem
print culture
prison reform
Progressive Era
Respectability politics
Reverdy D. Ransom
Rosetta Lawson
Sarah Bierce Scarborough E. Tanner
sociology
spiritual narratives
suffrage voting
Sylvanie Francoz Williams
temperance
traditions
travel writings
Victoria Earle Matthews
W. E. B. DuBois
Western University
Work of recovery effort

Product details

  • ISBN 9781496861689
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 15 Apr 2026
  • Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Scholarship on nineteenth- and early twentieth-century religious periodicals, particularly Black publications, remains sparse and often focuses on the theological contributions of male writers. Race Literature: Women Contributors to the "A.M.E. Church Review," 1884–1924 fills a gap by examining the prose contributions of over three dozen women writers to the quarterly publication of the African Methodist Episcopal denomination during this important postbellum, pre-Harlem era. An important work of recovery, Race Literature enriches our understanding of Black women’s intellectual history and the role these women writers played in addressing critical issues of their time.

While the A.M.E. Church Review published poetry, fiction, and drama from women writers, author Cynthia Lee Patterson shifts the focus to the important prose essays contributed to the quarterly. These women used their contributions to claim cultural authority for Black women, answering Victoria Earle Matthews’s 1895 call for a "race literature." Some of these contributors—Fanny Jackson Coppin, Frances E. W. Harper, Gertrude Mossell, and Katherine Tillman—established literary reputations in their own day and remain salient in recent scholarship. Race Literature extends our understanding of Black women’s intellectual history by recovering biobibliographical information for the lesser-known contributors to the quarterly.

Cynthia Lee Patterson is associate professor of English at University of South Florida. She is author of Art for the Middle Classes: America’s Illustrated Magazines of the 1840s, published by University Press of Mississippi, and her work has appeared in such publications as American Periodicals and the Journal of African American History.

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