Racial awareness and resistance in Jessie Redmon Fauset’s Plum Bun: A Novel Without a Moral
Abstract
Keywords
References
- Aldridge, D. P. (1990). Toward an Understanding of Black Male/Female Relationships. In Talmadge Anderson (Ed.), Black Studies: Theory, Method, and Cultural Perspectives (pp. 89-97). Washington: Washington State University Press.
- Ammons, E. (1987). New Literary History: Edith Wharton and Jessie Redmon Fauset. College Literature, 14(3), 207-218.
- Czarnecki, K. K. (2004). A Grievous Necessity: The Subject of Marriage in Transatlantic Modern Women’s Novels: Woolf, Rhys, Fauset, Larsen, and Hurston [Unpublished doctoral dissertation]. University of Cincinnati.
- Du Bois, W. E. B. (2008). The Souls of Black Folk. United States of America: Wilder Publications.
- Fauset, J. R. (1990). Plum Bun: A Novel Without a Novel. Boston: Beacon Press.
- Feeney, J. J. (1983). Jessie Fauset of The Crisis: Novelist, Feminist, Centenarian. The Crisis, 90(6), 20-22.
- Gates, H. L. Jr. (1988). The Trope of a New Negro and the Reconstruction of the Image of the Black. Representations, 24(24), 129-155.
- Johnson, A. A. (1978). Literary Midwife: Jessie Redmon Fauset and the Harlem Renaissance. Phylon, 39(2), 143-153.
Details
Primary Language
English
Subjects
Linguistics
Journal Section
Research Article
Authors
Fatih Öztürk
*
This is me
0000-0003-0116-4384
Türkiye
Publication Date
April 21, 2022
Submission Date
March 20, 2022
Acceptance Date
April 20, 2022
Published in Issue
Year 2022 Number: 27