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Preserving and Promoting Black Writing Since 1983

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Blogging About African American Literature—Various Topics related to Black Novels and Autobiographies

By adminSeptember 4, 2013November 15, 2016Uncategorized
♦100 Novels: Trend Analyses Project—February 22, 2011
♦The Great Migration—March 1, 2011
♦Men and Migration—Revisited—March 15, 2011
♦Black Men, Education, and Political Activism—March 29, 2011
♦Literary Traditions: Education and Political Activism—April 5, 2011
♦Black Men and Informal Educational Networks—April 12, 2011
♦Education and Revolution: Reading the novels of Sutton E.Griggs and Toni Morrison—April 19, 2011
♦How Richard Wright’s Mother and Grandmother Taught him to Revere the Imaginative—May 3, 2011
♦Richard Wright’s Formal and Informal Networks—May 10, 2011
♦Struggles for Freedom: Kanye West and Toni Morrison’s Artistic Renderings of Flight—August 29, 2011
♦The Race for Theory: Black Women’s Literary Contributions—September 12, 2011
♦Musical Influences on Black Writing— October 24, 2011
♦100 Novels Project Revisited—November 7, 2011
♦Occupy Wall Street and Ralph Ellison: African American Novels and Organized Resistance—November 8, 2011
♦Protest and Organized Resistance in 5 Black Novels—November 9, 2011
♦The Function of Voice: Narrating in the Third Person—November 13, 2012
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About HBW

The Project on the History of Black Writing (HBW) has been in the forefront of research and inclusion efforts in higher education for over 30 years. Founded in 1983 at the University of Mississippi, Oxford, HBW is committed to (1) literary recovery work in black studies; (2) textual scholarship, book history and pedagogy; (3) professional development, curriculum change and innovation; (4) and, public literacy programming. This blog serves as a virtual extension of the HBW’s initiatives and as a venue for up-to-date information about the program.

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