Principal Authors In The Database Of African American Poetry Dunbar, Paul Laurence, 18721906; Fordham, Mary Weston, b.1862? Menard, John Willis, 1838-1893; Millar, Gerard, fl.1906; Moore, Alice Ruth, 1875-1935; http://www.letrs.indiana.edu/daap/afam-auth.html
Extractions: Beadle, Samuel Alfred, 1857-1932 Bell, James Madison, 1826-1902 Benjamin, Robert C. O., 1855-1900 Bibb, Eloise A., 1878-1927 Blackson, Lorenzo Dow, b.1817 Campbell, Alfred Gibbs, b.1826? Campbell, James Edwin, 1867-1895 Cannon, Noah Calwell W., 1796?-1850 Clark, Benjamin Cutler, b.1825? Coffin, Frank Barbour, 1870?-1951 Corrothers, James David, 1869-1917 Davis, Daniel Webster, 1862-1913 Dunbar, Paul Laurence, 1872-1906 Fordham, Mary Weston, b.1862? Fortune, Michael, fl.1808 Fortune, Timothy Thomas, 1856-1928 Franklin, James Thomas, fl.1900 Gordon, Rev. Charles Benjamin William, b.1861 Grimke, Charlotte L. Forten, 1837-1914 Hammon, Jupiter, 1711-1800? Harper, Frances Ellen Watkins, 1824-1911 Heard, Josephine Delphine Henderson, b.1861 Holly, Joseph Cephas, 1825-1854 Horton, George Moses, 1797?-1883? Lambert, Mary Eliza [Perine] Tucker, b.1838 McClellan, George Marion, 1860-1934 McGirt, James Ephraim, 1874-1930 Menard, John Willis, 1838-1893 Millar, Gerard, fl.1906 Moore, Alice Ruth, 1875-1935
Abbott, David Phelps, 1863-1934 Abbott, Edwin Abbott, 1838-1926 Alexandre, Pere, 18021870 AKA Dumas, Alexandre, 1802-1870 Dumas, Alexandre, fils 1824-1895 Dumont, Theron Q. Dunbar, Alice Ruth Moore, 1875-1935 AKA Nelson http://www.olympus.edu.pl/Instytut NW/wirtualna biblioteka/autorzy.htm
Nineteenth Century American Women Poets - Book Contents Alice Ruth Moore DunbarNelson (1875-1935) The Works of Alice Dunbar-Nelson (1988) Violets (Crisis 1917), I Sit and Sew (The Dunbar Speaker and Entertainer http://www.blackwellpublishing.com/contents.asp?ref=0631203990&site=1
Book Lyrics Of Sunshine And Shadow Tragic Courtship and Marriage of Paul Laurence Dunbar and Alice Ruth Moore. Dunbar, Paul Laurence; 18721906; Marriage; Dunbar-Nelson, Alice Moore; 1875-1935; http://www.book-info.com/asin/0814706967.htm
Alexander Black Laurence Dunbar and Alice Ruth Moore Eleanor Alexander Dunbar, Paul Laurence, 18721906 Marriage Dunbar-Nelson, Alice Moore, 1875-1935 Dunbar, Paul http://topics.practical.org/browse/Alexander_Black
Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson 1875-1935 Alice Ruth Moore DunbarNelson 1875-1935. Although her first husband, Paul Laurance Dunbar, is more widely known to readers, Alice http://cwx.prenhall.com/bookbind/pubbooks/smith/medialib/profiles/dunbar-nelson.
Extractions: Although her first husband, Paul Laurance Dunbar, is more widely known to readers, Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson has received new attention from feminist scholars and specialists in African American literature. Dunbar-Nelson, a native of New Orleans, published her first volume, Violet and Other Tales , in 1895. The collection incorporates a multiplicity of genres, including poems, stories, and essays. The Goodness of St. Rocque and Other Stories appeared to critical acclaim in 1899. Dunbar's stories focus on the lives of people living in Louisiana who have Cajun and Creole backgrounds, including their rituals, beliefs, and distinctive lifestyles and languages. She was a skilled short-story writer, and her talent with verse is reflected in poems such as "I Sit and Sew." Her poetry reveals a feminist strain in her analysis of gender roles and marriage in America in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Much of her early poetry appeared in publications such as A. M. E. Review and The Crisis. Dunbar-Nelson, a highly educated woman, earned a degree from Dillard University in 1892. She also attended Cornell University and the University of Pennsylvania. By 1898, she had married poet Paul Laurence Dunbar after a courtship largely via correspondence. The two artists, however, were unhappily married, and they separated around 1902, four years before Dunbar's death. In 1916, she married Robert Nelson, and the two edited a newspaper called The Wilmington Advocate between 1920 and 1922. Dunbar-Nelson also worked as a schoolteacher, at schools such as Delaware's Industrial School for Colored Girls, and she was a member of the NAACP and the National Federation of Colored Women's Clubs. She died in 1935 after a distinguished life as a writer, editor, and activist, calling for the eradication of racial, gender, and class prejudices.
EBOOKS - ALPHABETICAL LIST ~ D Dumas, Alexandre, fils 18241895. Dumont, Theron Q. Dunbar, Alice Ruth Moore, 1875-1935. Duncan, Sara Jeannette, 1861-1922. Dunn, Arthur William, 1868-1927. http://www.globusz.com/authors_d1.html
Free EBooks - Alphabetical List - GLOBUSZ PUBLISHING Camille; Dame Aux Camelias, La. Dumont, Theron Q. Power of Concentration, The. Dunbar, Alice Ruth Moore, 18751935 AKA Nelson, Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar, 1875-1935 http://www.globusz.com/authors_d.asp
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Project Gutenberg: Authors List Dunbar, Alice Ruth Moore, 18751935 AKA Nelson, Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar, 1875-1935. Duncan, Sara Jeannette, 1861-1922 AKA Cotes, Everard, Mrs., 1861-1922. http://www.gwd50.k12.sc.us/PG-Authors.htm
Extractions: This is Project Gutenberg. This list has been downloaded from: "The Official and Original Project Gutenberg Web Site and Home Page" http://promo.net/pg/ PROJECT GUTENBERG ETEXTS AUTHORS IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER Last Updated: Monday 03 September 2001 by Pietro Di Miceli (webmaster@promo.net) The following etext have been released by Project Gutenberg. This list serves as reference only. For downloading books, please use our catalogs or search at: http://promo.net/pg/ Or check our FTP archive at: ftp://ibiblio.org/pub/docs/books/gutenberg/ and etext subdirectories. For problems with the FTP archives (ONLY) email gbnewby@ils.unc.edu, be sure to include a description of what happened AND which mirror site you were using. THANKS for visiting Project Gutenberg. * (No Author Attributed) Abbott, David Phelps, 1863-1934 Abbott, Edwin Abbott, 1838-1926 AKA: Square, A Abbott, John S. C. (John Stevens Cabot), 1805-1877 Adams, Andy, 1859-1935 Adams, Henry, 1838-1918 Adams, John Quincy, 1767-1848 Adams, Samuel, 1722-1803 Adams, William Taylor, 1822-1897 AKA: Optic, Oliver, 1822-1897
AAPD Bibliography Dunbar, Paul Laurence (18721906). The Collected Poetry of Paul Laurence Dunbar. 92p. Moore, Alice Ruth (1875-1935). Violets and Other Tales. New Orleans 1895. http://setis.library.usyd.edu.au/aapoetry/aapobib.html
Extractions: Sketches From Life in Dixie. Chicago: Scroll Publishing and Literary Syndicate, 1899.127p. Lyrics of the Under World. Intro. W.E. Mollison. Jackson, Miss.: W.A. Scott, 1912.148p. A Poem: Delivered August 1st, 1892, by J. Madison Bell, at the Grand Festival to commemorate the Emancipation of the Slaves in the District of Columbia, and the Emancipation of the Slaves in the British West Indian Isles. San Francisco: S.F. Sterett, 1862.10p. The Poetical Works of James Madison Bell. With a Biography by Bishop B.W. Arnett. Lansing, Mich.: Press of Wynkoop, Hallenbeck and Crawford. 2nd ed.1901. 221p. Poetic Gems. Charlottesville, VA: Peck and Allan, 1883. 14p. Poems. Boston: Monthly Review Press,1895.107p. Poems. Newark, N.J.: Advertiser Printing House, 1883. 120p.
Authors M-O Carrie Amelia, 18461911 Naunton, Robert, Sir, 1563-1635 Nelson, Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar, 1875-1935 AKA Dunbar, Alice Ruth Moore, 1875-1935 Nemiroff, Robert http://www.worldwide-library.co.uk/Authors/m-o.htm
Who Thinks Alexander The Great Was Gay?? Algernon Charles Swinburne (18371909), British poet Alice B. Toklas (1880-1967), US writer Alice Dunbar (Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson, 1875-1935), US editor http://www.greenspun.com/bboard/q-and-a-fetch-msg.tcl?msg_id=00AXi1
Questioning The Text (LITC465) Shockley, Ann Allen. Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar Nelson, 18751935 in Afro-American Women Writers 1746-1933 An Anthology and Critical Guide. http://www.loyno.edu/~bewell/465lit/sww3week6.html
Extractions: Note: Use these questions to develop the response that you post on the Discussion Board Forum for Week Six Violets" depends heavily for its effect on flower symbolism. What are the implications of the violets, orange-blossoms and tube-roses mentioned in the story? Evergreens and pinks? How does Dunbar-Nelson use these objects to shape the narrative? What role does Easter play in the story? What are the narrative gains and losses by this reliance on setting and detail to convey story and theme? What differences between men and women are defined here? What about the "regal-looking woman lounging before the fire"? "The Woman" is really more of an essay than a story, but it does lay out Dunbar-Nelson's views on women and work fairly plainly (and is, by the way, an example of early black feminist writing by a woman who, as Ann Allen Shockley suggests, "would not have thought of it as such at the time" What are the advantages that Dunbar-Nelson sees for working women? How does she define the disadvantages of marriage? Does she ultimately argue for or against marriage? Why (not)? How does the opening vignette dramatize popular conceptions of the working woman? What ideas or prejudices does Dunbar-Nelson seem to be arguing against?
LITR 5535 American Romanticism UHCL 2003 Sample Student Research Project Courtship and Marriage of Paul Laurence Dunbar and Alice Ruth Moore A History Although not about the work of Alice DunbarNelson (1875-1935), this text http://coursesite.cl.uh.edu/HSH/Whitec/LITR/5535/models/2003/projects/p03bevill.
Extractions: Sample Student Research Project, fall 2003 Charley R. A. Bevill November 2003 Forgotten Queens: The Women of the Harlem Renaissance: A Research Journal To A Dark Girl I love you for your brownness, And the rounded darkness of your breast, I love you for the breaking sadness in your voice And shadows where your wayward eye-lids rest. Something of old forgotten queens Lurks in the lithe abandon of your walk And something of the shackled slave Sobs in the rhythm of your talk. Oh, little brown girl, born for sorrows mate, Keep all you have of queenliness, Forgetting that you once were slave, And let your full lips laugh at Fate! Gwendolyn B. Bennett As a teenager, I read profusely. Admittedly, most of the books I was reading were romance novels. But in each book, I found myself transported away from my limited and limiting world. I became the characters in these novels. After I became a parent, I began to realize how little I knew about my own world where I came from, the stories of my past. I expected my children would begin to ask me the questions I never pondered. I returned to school. I found myself loaded with the writings of men (mostly) and women of a variety of eras and genres. Eventually, I was introduced to the Harlem Renaissance through the works of Zora Neale Hurston (1891-1960). I had heard of and read the writers Langston Hughes and James Weldon Johnson in middle and high school. But the New Negro movement was new to me. As I read Hurston, I wanted to know more about Hurston, the person, and what motivated her. Were there others like her? Surely, Hurston couldnt be the only woman writer of the time. Who was involved in this New Negro movement? What other work besides literature came from this era? What about the other women? I could not get past the old forgotten queens.
African American Literature The colored patriots of the American Revolution. E269 N3 N4 1968. Nelson, Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar, 18751935. The goodness of St. Rocque, and other stories. http://www.bluefieldstate.edu/library/afamn.htm
Stories, Listed By Author DunbarNELSON, Alice (Ruth Moore) (1875-1935) Summer Session, (ss) Spooks, Spies, and Private Eyes, ed. Paula L. Woods, Doubleday, 1995. http://contento.best.vwh.net/mags/s32.html
Index Stories, Listed By Author, Part 3 Browning (19071989); DUMONTE, ED; Dunbar-NELSON, Alice (Ruth Moore) (1875-1935); DUNCAN, RONALD (Frederick Henry) (1914-1982); DUNCAN, W http://contento.best.vwh.net/mags/q3.html
Extractions: Previous Table-of-Contents CONNINGTON, J. J. ; pseudonym of Alfred Walter Stewart CONNOLLY, RICHARD CONNOR, JACK CONNOR, REARDEN ... CONRAD, JOSEPH ; pseudonym of Teodor Josef Konrad Korzeniowski CONRAD, JOSEPH : Typhoon CONROW, ED CONROY, RICHARD TIMOTHY CONROY, SARAH BOOTH CONSTANTINE, STORM ... CONWAY, HUGH ; pseudonym of F. J. Fargus CONYERS, DOROTHEA (Smyth) COOK, MONTE COOK, P. E. ... COOK, ROBIN ; [i.e., Robert William Arthur Cook] (1931-1994); see pseudonym Derek Raymond COOK, SHARON COOK, THOMAS H. COONS, MAURICE (1902-1930); see pseudonym Armitage Trail COOPER, A. R. COOPER, ART COOPER, JEAN B. ... CORNWELL, DAVID (John Moore) (1931- ); see pseudonym CORNWELL, W. ROBERT CORREA, ARNALDO CORRIS, PETER (Robert) CORWIN, STEVE ... CORY, DESMOND ; pseudonym of Shaun McCarthy COSING, ARTHUR P. COSTA, CAROL COSTELLO, MATTHEW J(ohn) ... COX, A(nthony) B(erkeley) (1893-1971); see pseudonyms Anthony Berkeley Francis Iles COX, (William) GREG(ory) COX, MICHAEL (Andrew) ... COX, WILLIAM TREVOR (1928- ); see pseudonym William Trevor COXE, GEORGE HARMON
Famous Or Distinguished Gays, Lesbians, And Bisexuals Cardinal Dubois (16561723), French statesman Alice Dunbar (Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar-Nelson, 1875-1935), US editor, writer, and activist Isadora Duncan (1877 http://calvin.usc.edu/~trimmer/famous_names.html