Showing 1 - 3 results of 3 for search '"Mexican–American War"', query time: 0.03s Refine Results
  1. 1

    Calypso magnolia : the crosscurrents of Caribbean and Southern literature / by Lowe, John Wharton

    Published 2016
    Table of Contents: “…Crossing the Caribbean: southerners write the Mexican American War -- Liberating fictions: the Caribbean imaginary in the novels of Lucy Holcombe Pickens and Martin Delany -- Unleashing the loas: the literary legacy of the Haitian revolution in the U.S. …”
    Book
  2. 2

    Calypso magnolia : the crosscurrents of Caribbean and Southern literature / by Lowe, John Wharton

    Published 2016
    Table of Contents: “…Crossing the Caribbean: southerners write the Mexican American War -- Liberating fictions: the Caribbean imaginary in the novels of Lucy Holcombe Pickens and Martin Delany -- Unleashing the loas: the literary legacy of the Haitian revolution in the United States South and the Caribbean -- Constance Fenimore Woolson and Lafcadio Hearn: extending the boundaries of the transnational South -- A proper order of attention: McKay and Hurston honor the hardy peasant -- Palette of fire: the aesthetics of propaganda in Black boy and The castle of my skin -- Southern ajiaco: Miami and the generation of Cuban American writing.…”
    CONNECT
    Electronic eBook
  3. 3

    Calypso magnolia : the crosscurrents of Caribbean and Southern literature / by Lowe, John Wharton

    Published 2016
    Table of Contents: “…Crossing the Caribbean: southerners write the Mexican American War -- Liberating fictions: the Caribbean imaginary in the novels of Lucy Holcombe Pickens and Martin Delany -- Unleashing the loas: the literary legacy of the Haitian revolution in the United States South and the Caribbean -- Constance Fenimore Woolson and Lafcadio Hearn: extending the boundaries of the transnational South -- A proper order of attention: McKay and Hurston honor the hardy peasant -- Palette of fire: the aesthetics of propaganda in Black boy and The castle of my skin -- Southern ajiaco: Miami and the generation of Cuban American writing.…”
    CONNECT
    CONNECT
    Electronic eBook