Monstrous Work and Radical Satisfaction: Black Women Writing under Segregation

Eve Dunbar
University of Minnesota Press

Monstrous Work and Radical Satisfaction offers new and insightful readings of African American women’s writings in the 1930s–1950s, illustrating how these writers centered Black women’s satisfaction as radical resistance to the false and incomplete promise of liberal racial integration.

Eve Dunbar examines the writings of Ann Petry, Dorothy West, Alice Childress, and Gwendolyn Brooks to show how these women explored self-fulfillment over normative and sanctioned models of national belonging. 

Read more at University of Minnesota Press

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An Efficient Womanhood: Women and the Making of the Universal Negro Improvement Association

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Last Seen: The Enduring Search by Formerly Enslaved People to Find Their Lost Families