Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson’s Activist Literature

This article illuminates how the meshing of key aspects of Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson’s life and work—writing political activism, teaching—has been obscured by American literary studies’ traditional overreliance on three related assumptions: that diachronicity suffices in accounts of an author’s...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Research in African literatures Vol. 55; no. 3; pp. 93 - 103
Main Author: Zagarell, Sandra A
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Bloomington Indiana University Press 22.09.2025
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ISSN:0034-5210, 1527-2044, 1527-2044
Online Access:Get full text
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Summary:This article illuminates how the meshing of key aspects of Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson’s life and work—writing political activism, teaching—has been obscured by American literary studies’ traditional overreliance on three related assumptions: that diachronicity suffices in accounts of an author’s life, that periodization suffices in accounts of literary history, and that authors are coherent beings. Discussing a range of Dunbar-Nelson’s work—an early sketch, an essay, and published and unpublished fiction— this essay combines synchronicity and diachronicity to engage with the multi-facetedness of her writing about such issues as racial identity and Black involvement in U.S. political parties.
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ISSN:0034-5210
1527-2044
1527-2044
DOI:10.2979/ral.00074