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Pauline E. Hopkins
Contending Forces: A Romance Illustrative of Negro Life North and South.
Oxford University Press, 1988. The Schomburg Library of Nineteenth-Century Black Women Writers. WIth an introduction by Richard Yarborough. 0195067851 xlviii/402 pages.
Softcover volume, measuring approximately 4.75" x 6.75", is new.
""In "Contending Forces" (1900), her best-known novel and her only work of fiction published in book form during her lifetime, Pauline Hopkins uses the conventions of the sentimental romance as she seeks to encourage social change. In its pages we encounter noble heroes and virtuous heroines, exotic settings, unsavory villains, melodramatic scenes, and a star-crossed love affair. Both an extraordinarily detailed examination of black life in nineteenth-century America and a richly textured and engrossing piece of fiction, "Contending Forces" remains one of the most important works produced by an African-American before World War I."

Contending Forces: A Romance Illustrative of Negro Life North and South

$15.00Price
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