Book Chapters
- Chapter
Chapter 9 - Feminism at War
- from Part II - Differences after Darwin
-
- Book: After Darwin
- Chapter
Chapter 14 - Irish Literary Feminism and Its Digital Archive(s)
- from Part IV - The Digital
-
- Book: Technology in Irish Literature and Culture
- Chapter
Chapter 14 - The “Woman Question”
- from Part II - Russian Social and Political Contexts
-
- Book: Tolstoy in Context
- Chapter
Chapter 4 - Suffragism
- from Part I - 1900–1945: Ideas and Governance
-
- Book: The Cambridge Companion to Twentieth-Century Literature and Politics
- Chapter
Chapter 10 - Feminism and Women’s Poetry from 1970 to 2000
- from Part II - American Poetry from 1970 to 2000
- Book: The Cambridge Introduction to American Poetry since 1945
- Chapter
Chapter 14 - Women’s Rights
- from Part III - Activism
-
- Book: Frederick Douglass in Context
- Chapter
Chapter 20 - Queer Feminist Hip Hop
- from Part IV - Positionalities
-
- Book: Latin American Literature in Transition 1980–2018
- Chapter
12 - Unqueering the Essay
- from Part II - The Work of the Essay
-
- Book: The Cambridge Companion to The Essay
- Chapter
Introduction
-
- Book: Decoding Anne Lister
TDR
- Chapter
28 - Reclaiming the Past
- from (I) - Looking Back, Looking Forward
-
- Book: The Cambridge History of Black and Asian British Writing
Victorian Literature & Culture
Journal of the Society for American Music
“In the 1920s, singer Florence Mills established an international career on the vaudeville stage, and her songs envoiced the political ambitions of an entire generation of New Negroes. In “Finding Florence Mills: The Voice of the Harlem Jazz Queen in the Compositions of William Grant Still and Edmund Thornton Jenkins,” I consider how sound, in general, and vocal timbre, in particular, can be imbued with anti-racist expression. Mills was one of the most famous performers of the 1920s, yet she was never recorded, and she died prematurely from complications following surgery. She was also an activist and did not shy away from inviting white people to reconsider their prejudice.” Stephanie Doktor, Author