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Films about Queer History

 

Alice M. Dunbar-Nelson (1875 - 1935)

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Masterpieces of Negro Eloquence 1818-1913

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Laughing to Stop Myself From CryingLaughing to Stop Myself From Crying by Alice Dunbar-Nelson

What men call love and the gods adultery is far more common where the climate's sultry. Life amongst the Creole community in New Orleans is a gumbo mix of tropical heat, romance and petty squabbles tied to long-forgotten historical feuds all of which spill over into the pages of Laughing To Stop Myself Crying. Alice Dunbar-Nelson writes about difference: Catholic versus Protestant, black versus white. The dark Manuela employs a voodoo madam to vanquish her blonde rival in romance; Tony's wife is beaten and kicked out on the street by her husband and an old grandfather hangs his head in shame as his beautiful granddaughter ignores the ways of a family which has held itself proudly aloof from `those Americans` from time immemorial to marry a white man...

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The Works of Alice Dunbar-Nelson by Alice Dunbar-Nelson, Gloria T. Hull (Editor)

Spanning the gamut of literary genres, from autobiographical short stories to poetry, journalism, and novelettes, this is a comprehensive collection of one of America's most seminal women writers. A testament to the nineteenth century as birthplace for black woman writers, The Works of Alice Dunbar-Nelson offers insight into the themes of oppression and intolerance, often considered dangerous or ignored in the nineteenth century, but now pervade much writing today. Themes such as crossing racial boundaries, infused with Dunbar-Nelson's autobiographical fervor.

"Blistering Bayou nights. Crowds of Creoles - laughing, dancing, loving, scheming. Voodoo queens, solemn cathedrals. Victorian gowns, greasy markets. Steamy streets of the French Quarter, angling away from moonlit Gulf lagoons. Boatmen languishing under the stars shimmering over smarmy Lake Pontchartrain. Seductive images so vivid and sensuous, they transport readers back to the Bayou country of late nineteenth-century southern Louisiana. Alice Ruth Moore Dunbar suspends time in the twenty-nine vignettes and poems of Violets and Other Tales, published in 1895, and the fourteen selections in The Goodness of St. Rocque and Other Stories, composed after her marriage to Negro Poet Laureate Paul Laurence Dunbar and published in 1898. While the stories in The Goodness of St. Rocque are especially well-crafted, all of her fiction demonstrates her early genius. Peppering her stories with a variety of dialects, she creates a chorus of voices that are contrasted with the sometimes romantic, sometimes ironical, always teasing voice of her narrator. Mostly, the stories are about love - unrequited, illicit, betrayed, avenged. And her lovers, like the author herself, are an ethnic mélange: immigrant grocers of the old countries -- France, Italy, Greece; Camille, the beautiful, sequestered orphan; Annette, an accomplished, deceived songstress; the garrulous woman who sells pralines by the Archbishop's chapel, endlessly waving a latanier fan; an abused, distraught wife; M'sieu Fortier, Athanasia, Mr. Baptista, La Juanita, Titee. The characters and stories enchant with complex themes, pathos and beauty, color, and wit"  -- Joycelyn Moody, from 500 Great Books by Women

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Alice Dunbar-Nelson Biography

From Women of Color Women of Words, Rutgers University

Excerpt:

Alice Ruth Moore was born on July 19, 1875 in New Orleans. Dunbar-Nelson graduated from a 2-year teacher training program at Straight College, now Dillard University. She later studied at Cornell University, Columbia University , and the University of Pennsylvania where she specialized in psychology and English educational testing. Throughout her life she taught in public schools.

On March 6, 1898 she married the celebrated poet Paul Laurence Dunbar after a courtship by correspondence, and moved to Washington, DC. They separated in 1902. The second of three marriages, she secretly married a fellow teacher, Henry Author Callis in 1910, but divorced a year later. Her final marriage, one which lasted until her death, was to Robert J. Nelson, a journalist, in 1916.

Dunbar-Nelson, who was very light complexioned, often passed for white, and was sometimes frustrated in her relations with darker-skinned African Americans because of it. A complex woman who was a poet, journalist, playwright, and unpublished novelist, Alice engaged in intimate relationships with both men and women...

 

Alice Dunbar-Nelson Papers

Universe of Delaware Library

The Alice Dunbar-Nelson Papers consist of the literary, professional, and personal papers of Alice Dunbar-Nelson. The papers include an extensive collection of her incoming correspondence. Of particular note is her correspondence (1895-1904) with Paul Laurence Dunbar, which also includes her letters to Dunbar. The Alice Dunbar-Nelson Papers also include a comprehensive collection of manuscripts of her writing, including novels, stories, poetry, drama, and essays. Dunbar-Nelson maintained a daily diary for most of her adult life and the extent portions of her diaries are present in her papers. The Alice Dunbar-Nelson papers also include significant collections of family papers, scrapbooks, newspaper clippings, ephemera, and memorabilia.

 

Hope Deferred

By Alice Dunbar-Nelson

Excerpt:

The direct rays of the August sun smote on the pavements of the city and made the soda-water signs in front of the drug stores alluringly suggestive of relief. Women in scant garments, displaying a maximum of form and a minimum of taste, crept along the pavements, their mussy light frocks suggesting a futile disposition on the part of the wearers to keep cool. Traditional looking fat men mopped their faces, and dived frantically into screened doors to emerge redder and more perspiring. The presence of small boys, scantily clad and of dusky hue and languid steps marked the city, if not distinctively southern, at least one on the borderland between the North and the South...

  

Violets and Other Tales

Prepared as part of The Digital Schomburg, a project providing electronic access to collections on the African Diaspora and Africa from The New York Public Library.

Excerpt:

"And she tied a bunch of violets with a tress of her pretty brown hair."

She sat in the yellow glow of the lamplight softly humming these words. It was Easter evening, and the newly risen spring world was slowly sinking to a gentle, rosy, opalescent slumber, sweetly tired of the joy which had pervaded it all day. For in the dawn of the perfect morn, it had arisen, stretched out its arms in glorious happiness to greet the Saviour and said its hallelujahs, merrily trilling out carols of bird, and organ and flower-song. But the evening had come, and rest.

There was a letter lying on the table, it read:

"Dear, I send you this little bunch of flowers as my Easter token. Perhaps you may not be able to read their meanings, so I'll tell you...

 

More Online E-texts 
Mine Eyes Have Seen
The Goodness of St. Rocque, and Other Stories
"Tony's Wife"
"The Fisherman of Pass Christian"
"M'sieu Fortier's Violin"
"By the Bayou St. John"
"When the Bayou Overflows"
"Mr. Baptiste"
"A Carnival Jangle"
"Little Miss Sophie"
"Sister Josepha"
"The Praline Woman"
"Odalie"
"La Juanita"
"Titee"

  

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