Free Joe, and Other Georgian Sketches

References

  1. ^ Brasch
  2. ^ Bryson, Bill (1991). Mother Tongue: English and How It Got that Way. Harper Perennial. ISBN 0-380-71543-0.
  3. ^ Harris, Joel Chandler. "The Accidental Author", Lippencot's Magazine, April 1886, p. 418.
  4. ^ a b Bickley
  5. ^ James, Sheryl. "The Forgotten Author: Joel Chandler Harris". The Blade, February 21, 2016. Retrieved January 1, 2018.
  6. ^ "Joel Chandler Harris (1845–1908)". New Georgia Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on June 6, 2011. Retrieved July 8, 2008.
  7. ^ In Savannah, Ga. - New York Times, November 19, 2004
  8. ^ Brasch, 23–33
  9. ^ Stanton joined the Atlanta Constitution in 1889, having been recruited by Harris and Grady.
  10. ^ a b Bickley, 38
  11. ^ Page, Walter Hines. "The New South." Boston Post, September 28, 1881
  12. ^ Bickley, 59.
  13. ^ "Uncle Remus." Saturday Review of Books, the New York Times. July 11, 1908.
  14. ^ Bickley, Bruce (2003) Introduction to Nights with Uncle Remus. Penguin Books. ISBN 1101010401.
  15. ^ Goldthwaite, 254–257
  16. ^ Weaver, Jace (1997) That the People Might Live : Native American Literatures and Native American Community. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195344219. p. 4
  17. ^ Hare: Infamous Trickster God. godchecker.com
  18. ^ Brookes, Stella Brewer (1950). Joel Chandler Harris: Folklorist. University of Georgia Press. p. 63.
  19. ^ Goldthwaite, 282
  20. ^ Brookes, Stella Brewer (1950). Joel Chandler Harris: Folklorist. University of Georgia Press. p. 43
  21. ^ Twain, Mark (2000) Life on the Mississippi. Dover. ISBN 0-486-41426-4. p. 210.
  22. ^ Kipling, Rudyard (December 6, 1895). Letter to Joel Chandler Harris.
  23. ^ Johnson, James Weldon (2008). The Book of American Negro Poetry. Book Jungle. ISBN 1605975303. p. 10
  24. ^ Harris, Joel Chandler (October 5, 1878) The Sunday Gazette.
  25. ^ a b Bickley, Bruce (1987). "Joel Chandler Harris and the Old and New South: Paradoxes of Perception". The Atlanta Historical Journal: 12.
  26. ^ Gooch, Cheryl Renee (2009). "The Literary Mind of a Cornfield Journalist: Joel Chandler Harris's 1904 Negro Question Articles" (PDF). Journal of the International Association for Literary Journalism Studies. 1 (2): 79.
  27. ^ Harris, Julia Collier, ed. (1931). Joel Chandler Harris, Editor and Essayist. Chapel Hill: Univ. of North Carolina Press. p. 103. OCLC 272364.
  28. ^ Odum, Howard (1925) Southern Pioneers in Social Interpretation, University of North Carolina Press. p. 153
  29. ^ Martin, Jay (1981) "Joel Chandler Harris and the Cornfield Journalist", pp. 92–97 in Crititcal Essays on Joel Chandler Harris Boston: G.K. Hall. ISBN 0816183813.
  30. ^ Harlan, Louis R. and John W. Blassingame (eds.) (1972) The Booker T. Washington Papers: Volume 1: The Autobiographical Writings. Open Book Edition, University of Illinois. ISBN 0252002423
  31. ^ Cleghorn, Reese (December 8, 1967) "We Distort Them: Of Joel Chandler Harris and Uncle Remus", The Atlanta Journal
  32. ^ Brasch, 245
  33. ^ Bickley, 104–105
  34. ^ a b c Goldthwaite, 256
  35. ^ from The Sahara of the Bozart
  36. ^ Cartwright, 126
  37. ^ Walker, Alice (Summer 1981). "Uncle Remus, No Friend of Mine". Southern Exposure. 9: 29–31.
  38. ^ Levine, Lawrence (1977). Black Culture and Black Consciousness: Afro-American Folk Thought from Slavery to Freedom. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-502374-9.
  39. ^ 1920, reprinted 1968 by University Books, New Hyde Park, New York. Also note the 14 examples of tales translated into English where Sulwe, the Hare, is the mischievous main character, volume 2, page 375ff.
  40. ^ Sigismund Koelle, African Native Literature, London, 1854, reprinted by Books for Libraries Press, Freeport, New York, 1970. page 162.
  41. ^ Sundquist, Eric (1998). To Wake the Nations: Race in the Making of American Literature. Belknap Press of Harvard University Press. ISBN 0-674-89331-X.
  42. ^ Lester, Julius (1987). The Tales of Uncle Remus: The Adventures of Brer Rabbit. Dial Books. ISBN 0-8037-0271-X.
  43. ^ Ellison, Ralph (1995). Going to the Territory. Vintage. ISBN 0-679-76001-6. p. 146.
  44. ^ Cochran, Robert (2004). "Black father: the subversive achievement of Joel Chandler Harris". African American Review. 38 (1): 21–34. doi:10.2307/1512229. JSTOR 1512229.
  45. ^ Pamplin, Claire (2006). "Plantation Makeover: Joel Chandler Harris's Myths and Violations", pp. 33–51 in The great American makeover: television, history, nation. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 1403974845.
  46. ^ Hendrick, Burton J., ed. (1928). The Training of an American: The Earlier Life and Letters of Walter H. Page, 1855–1913. Boston: Houghton Mifflin.
  47. ^ Gates, Henry Louis; Tatar, Maria (2017). The Annotated African American Folktales (The Annotated Books). Liveright. ISBN 9780871407566.
  48. ^ Annotated African American Folktales Reclaims Stories Passed Down From Slavery
  49. ^ Lear, Linda (2008) Beatrix Potter: A Life in Nature, Macmillan. ISBN 0312377967. p. 131.
  50. ^ Griska, Joseph M. (1977) Two New Joel Chandler Harris Reviews of Mark Twain. Duke University Press. p. 584.
  51. ^ Carkeet, David (1981) "The Source for the Arkansas Gossips in Huckleberry Finn", pp. 90–92 in American Literary Realism, XIV.
  52. ^ McCoy, Sharon D. (1994) The Dialect of Modernism: Race, Language, and Twentieth Century Literature. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195122917. p. 77.
  53. ^ Wachtell, Cynthia (2009) "The Wife of His Youth: A Trickster Tale", p. 170 in Charles Chesnutt Reappraised: Essays on the First Major African American Fiction Writer. North Carolina: McFarland and Company. ISBN 0786480017.
  54. ^ a b North, Michael (1994) The Minstrel Mask as Alter Ego. Centenary reflections on Mark Twain's No. 44, The Mysterious Stranger, p. 77.
  55. ^ Bickley, 187.
  56. ^ Foote, Shelby, Darwin T. Turner, and Evans Harrington (1977) "Faulkner and Race", pp. 79–90 in The South and Faulkner's Yoknapatawph: The Actual and the Apocryphal.
  57. ^ Davis, Thadious (2003) "The Signifying Abstraction: Reading the Negro" in Absalom, Absalom." William Faulkner's Absalom, Absalom!: a casebook. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0195154789. p. 77.
  58. ^ Cartwright, 127.
  59. ^ "Dedicated to This Walt Disney Classic". Song of the South.net. Retrieved April 28, 2014.
  60. ^ Cohen, Karl F (1997). Forbidden Animation: Censored Cartoons and Blacklisted Animators in America. North Carolina: McFarland & Company, Inc. pp. 60–68. ISBN 0-7864-0395-0.
  61. ^ "Home". Uncle Remus Museum.
  62. ^ "Home". Joel C. Harris Middle School.

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