Bleeding roots

File
Contributors
Publisher
Florida Atlantic University
Date Issued
2009
Description
Scholars of the literary depictions of lynching have given the majority of their attention to the emasculation of the black male, but the representation of the black female lynch victim has been overlooked. My thesis examines the deaths of black women that had the same effect as lynching practices used against men. This specific literary form of lynching will concentrate on two plays: Mary P. Burrill's They That Sit in Darkness (1919) and Marita Bonner's Exit: An Illusion (1929) and two novels by Toni Morrison, Beloved and Sula. Considering the contours of these black female deaths we can expand the traditional definition of lynching to include the black female lynch victim. The aspects that make her death a lynching are encased in more subtleties than a traditional definition of lynching allows for, and less visible.
Note

by Tinea Williams.

Language
Type
Form
Extent
vi, 50 p.
Subject (Geographic)
Identifier
341046519
OCLC Number
341046519
Additional Information
by Tinea Williams.
Thesis (M.A.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2009.
Includes bibliography.
Electronic reproduction. Boca Raton, Fla., 2009. Mode of access: World Wide Web.
Date Backup
2009
Date Text
2009
Date Issued (EDTF)
2009
Extension


FAU
FAU
admin_unit="FAU01", ingest_id="ing3764", creator="creator:SPATEL", creation_date="2009-06-01 09:00:23", modified_by="super:SPATEL", modification_date="2009-07-17 10:36:37"

IID
FADT199329
Organizations
Person Preferred Name

Williams, Tinea.
Graduate College
Physical Description

electronic
vi, 50 p.
Title Plain
Bleeding roots
Use and Reproduction
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/
Origin Information


Boca Raton, Fla.

Florida Atlantic University
2009
Place

Boca Raton, Fla.
Title
Bleeding roots
Other Title Info

Bleeding roots
the absence and evidence of the lynched black female body