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Race Literature - Women Contributors to the A.M.E. Church Review, 1884–1924

Race Literature

Women Contributors to the A.M.E. Church Review, 1884–1924

By Cynthia Lee Patterson
Hardcover : 9781496861689, 184 pages, 30 b&w illustrations, April 2026
Paperback : 9781496861696, 184 pages, 30 b&w illustrations, April 2026
Expected to ship: 2026-04-15
Expected to ship: 2026-04-15

Table of contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Beyond “Creation and Transmission of Literary Culture”
Chapter 2: AME Churchwomen Making History
Chapter 3: Sociological Writings: Home, Family, Church
Chapter 4: Sociological Writings: Suffrage, Temperance, Criminality, Prison Reform
Chapter 5: E. Marie Carter’s “Notes of Travel” Column, 1903–1912
Chapter 6: Matters Educational
Chapter 7: Matters Scientific and Philosophical
Conclusion: Writing Race Literature in Extraordinary Times
Appendix: Women Contributors and Their Articles in The AME Church Review, 1884–1924
Notes
Index

A comprehensive study of Black women writers in the official journal of the African Methodist Episcopal Church

Description

Scholarship on nineteenth- and early twentieth-century religious periodicals, particularly Black publications, remains sparse and often focuses on the theological contributions of male writers. Race Literature: Women Contributors to the “A.M.E. Church Review,” 1884–1924 fills a gap by examining the prose contributions of over three dozen women writers to the quarterly publication of the African Methodist Episcopal denomination during this important postbellum, pre-Harlem era. An important work of recovery, Race Literature enriches our understanding of Black women’s intellectual history and the role these women writers played in addressing critical issues of their time.

While the A.M.E. Church Review published poetry, fiction, and drama from women writers, author Cynthia Lee Patterson shifts the focus to the important prose essays contributed to the quarterly. These women used their contributions to claim cultural authority for Black women, answering Victoria Earle Matthews’s 1895 call for a “race literature.” Some of these contributors—Fanny Jackson Coppin, Frances E. W. Harper, Gertrude Mossell, and Katherine Tillman—established literary reputations in their own day and remain salient in recent scholarship. Race Literature extends our understanding of Black women’s intellectual history by recovering biobibliographical information for the lesser-known contributors to the quarterly.

Reviews

"Cynthia Lee Patterson has achieved a significant recovery effort by revealing the voices of numerous Black women writers who published in the A.M.E. Church Review. The author takes seriously these women’s varied contributions, and this volume makes a meaningful contribution to our understanding of Black women’s history, AME Church history, and the history of Black periodicals."

- Christina Dickerson-Cousin, author of Black Indians and Freedmen: The African Methodist Episcopal Church and Indigenous Americans, 1816–1916