Victorian Scribblers

Episode 23 - Pauline Hopkins


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Sources for this episode:

  • Lois Brown. Pauline Elizabeth Hopkins: Black Daughter of the Revolution
  • Hanna Wallinger. Pauline E. Hopkins: A Literary Biography
  • Cary D. Wintz and Paul Finkelman. The Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance
  • [The Pauline Hopkins Society] (http://www.paulinehopkinssociety.org)
  • [Black Past article on Hopkins] (https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/hopkins-pauline-elizabeth-1859-1930)
  • [Library on Congress. The Grand Army of the Republic] (https://www.loc.gov/rr/main/gar/)
  • [Robert C. Hayden. African Americans in Boston: More than 350 Years] (https://archive.org/details/africanamericans00hayd_0)
  • William Wells Brown, 1814?-1884. Documenting the American South
  • Additional resources

    • [The Colored American Magazine] (http://coloredamerican.org/?page_id=548#hopkins)
    • [N. King. Teaching Crime Fiction and the African American Literary Canon] (http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/67208/1/N%20King%20Teaching%20Af%20Am%20Crime%20Fiction.pdf)
    • [Richard Yarborough, JoAnn Pavletich, Ira Dworkin, and Lauren Dembowitz. 'Rethinking Pauline Hopkins: Plagiarism, Appropriation, and African American Cultural Production'] (https://doi.org/10.1093/alh/ajy014)
    • The four men elected in 1870 were Joseph H. Rainey, Robert C. Delarge, and Robert B. Elliott. Hiram Revels was elected to the Senate in 1869 and seated in 1870. [Oct. 19, 1870: First African Americans Elected to the House of Representatives] (https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/african-americans-house-of-reps/)

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      Victorian ScribblersBy Courtney Floyd and Eleanor Dumbill

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