Harriet Wilson’s New England
JerriAnne Boggis, Eve Allegra Raimon, Barbara A. White, editors; Foreword by Henry Louis Gates Jr.
Softcover, 6×9, 272 pages, Notes, Index
University of New Hampshire Press, 2007
ISBN: 978-1-58465-642-5
African American Literary Criticism
Women Writers in Women’s Studies
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In the mid-nineteenth century, Harriet E. Wilson, an enterprising woman of mixed racial heritage, wrote an autobiographical novel describing the abuse and servitude endured by a young black girl in the supposedly free North. Originally published in Boston in 1859 and “lost” until its 1983 republication by noted scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr., Our Nig; or Sketches from the Life of a Free Black, is generally considered to be the first work of fiction written by an African American woman published in the United States. With this collection, the first devoted entirely to Wilson and her novel, the editors have compiled essays that seek to understand Wilson within New England and New England as it might have appeared to Wilson and her contemporaries.