Conjuring : Black women, fiction, and literary tradition
Everywoman
Midland book
Everywoman.
Introduction : Zora Neale Hurston, Alice Walker, and the "Ancient power" of black women / Adding color and contour to early American self-portraitures : autobiographical writings of Afro-American women / Green-eyed monsters of the slavocracy : jealous mistresses in two slave narratives / Pauline Hopkins : our literary foremother / Out of the woods and into the world : a study of interracial friendships between women in American novels / The neglected dimension of Jessie Redmon Fauset / Ann Petry's demythologizing of American culture and Afro-American character / "Pattern against the sky" : deism and motherhood in Ann Petry's The street / Jubilee : the Black woman's celebration of human community / Chosen place, timeless people : some figurations on the new world / Lady no longer sings the blues : rape, madness, and silence in The bluest eye
Recitation to the Griot : storytelling and learning in Toni Morrison's Song of Solomon / The wise witches : Black women mentors in the fiction of Octavia E. Butler / "What it is I think she's doing anyhow" : a reading of Toni Cade Bambara's The salt eaters / Trajectories of self-definition : placing contemporary Afro-American women's fiction / Afterword : Cross-currents, discontinuities : Black women's fiction
Spillers, Hortense J.
Pryse, Marjorie, 1948-
Marjorie Pryse -- Frances Smith Foster -- Minrose C. Gwin -- Claudia Tate -- Elizabeth Schultz -- Deborah E. McDowell -- Bernard W. Bell -- Marjorie Pryse -- Minrose C. Gwin -- Hortense J. Spillers -- Madonne M. Miner.
Joseph T. Skerrett, Jr. -- Thelma J. Shinn -- Gloria T. Hull -- Barbara Christian -- Hortense J. Spillers.
edited by Marjorie Pryse and Hortense J. Spillers.