Daughter
of the Revolution
Price: $34.95
Subtitle: The Major Nonfiction Works of
Pauline E. Hopkins
Author: Ira Dworkin
Subject: Literary Studies / African
American Studies
Paper ISBN 0-8135-3962-5
Cloth ISBN 0-8135-3961-7
Pages: 472 pp. 12 b&w illustrations
Series: Multi-Ethnic
Literatures of the Americas
Praise for Daughter
of the Revolution
"Ira Dworkin has done a beautiful job giving us an immensely important
book."
—Elizabeth Ammons, Tufts University
"This sprawling, lucidly-organized and engrossing anthology brings together dozens of Hopkins’s rarely-referenced non-fiction essays and articles for the first time in one collection. As an anthology, Daughter of the Revolution showcases Pauline Hopkins’s brilliant gifts as a public intellectual, an historical archivist, an editor and a prose writer. Daughter of the Revolution is invaluable to scholars because of its careful attention to recuperating and preserving the uniquely trailblazing prose of a black feminist radical".—American Periodicals, 2008
Description:
Pauline E. Hopkins (1859-1930) came to prominence in the
early years of the twentieth century as an outspoken writer, editor,
and critic. Frequently recognized for her first novel, Contending
Forces, she emerged as one of the most prolific African American women
writers of fiction prior to 1930 and is currently one of the most
widely read and studied African American novelists from that period.
While nearly all of Hopkins's fiction remains in print, there
is very little of her nonfiction available. This reader brings together
dozens of her hard-to-find essays. Also included are longer nonfiction
works such as Famous Men of the Negro Race, Famous Women of the Negro
Race, The Dark Races of the Twentieth Century, and A Primer of Facts
Pertaining to the Early Greatness of the African Race and the
Possibility of Restoration by Its Descendents, some of which are
published here for the first time in their entirety.
Through these works, along with two juvenile essays from the
1870s, a personal letter, and two speeches, readers encounter a voice
that is committed to constructing an international discourse on race,
recovering the militant abolitionist tradition to combat Jim Crow,
celebrating black political participation during and after the
Reconstruction era, articulating the connections between race and
labor, and insisting on equal rights for women. Hopkins's writing will
challenge contemporary scholars to rethink their understanding of black
activism and modernity in the early twentieth century.
About the Author:
Ira Dworkin is a Fulbright scholar at the University
of Kinshasa in the Democratic Republic of the Congo.
Receive
special offers and book notices by email. Sign up for RU READING?
Price: $34.95
|