
Attribution
Eleanor AlexanderPublication Details
BookNew York University Press2001Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (UPPER LEVEL) PS1557 .A76 2001 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
View record in LOLA catalogDescription
By exposing the devastating consequences of unequal power dynamics and gender relations in the union of the celebrated writers, Paul Laurence Dunbar and Alice Ruth Moore, and by examining the hidden underside of the Dunbars’ storybook romance where alcohol, sex, and violence prove fatal, Eleanor Alexander produces a provocative, nuanced interpretation of late Victorian courtship and marriage, of post-emancipation racial respectability and class mobility, of pre-modern sexual rituals and color conventions in an emergent elite black society.” Davis, Vanderbilt University “Eleanor Alexander’s vivid account of the most famous black writer of his day, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and his wife Alice, illuminates the world of the African American literati at the opening of the twentieth century. Drawing on a variety of love letters, diaries, journals, and autobiographies, Eleanor Alexander vividly recounts Dunbar’s and Moore’s tumultuous affair, from a courtship conducted almost entirely through letters and an elopement brought on by Dunbar’s brutal, drunken rape of Moore, through their passionate marriage and its eventual violent dissolution in 1902. (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)Subject
- Dunbar, Paul Laurence, — 1872-1906 — Marriage
- Dunbar-Nelson, Alice Moore, — 1875-1935 — Marriage
- Authors’ spouses — United States — Biography
- Authors, American — 20th century — Biography
- Poets, American — 19th century — Biography
- Married people — United States — Biography
- African American authors — Biography
- African Americans — Biography
Places in this work
Notes
- "On February 10, 1906, Alice Ruth Moore, estranged wife of renowned early-twentieth-century poet Paul Laurence Dunbar, boarded a streetcar, settled comfortably into her seat, and opened her newspaper to learn of her husband’s death the day before. Paul Laurence Dunbar, son of former slaves, whom Frederick Douglass had dubbed "the most promising young colored man in America," was dead from tuberculosis at the age of 33." "Lyrics of Sunshine and Shadow traces the tempestuous romance of America’s most noted African American literary couple. Drawing on a variety of love letters, diaries, journals, and autobiographies, Eleanor Alexander vividly recounts Dunbar and Moore’s tumultuous affair, from a courtship conducted almost entirely through letters and an elopement brought on by Dunbar’s brutal, drunken rape of Moore, through their passionate marriage and its eventual violent dissolution in 1902. Moore, once having left Dunbar, rejected his every entreaty to return to him, responding to his many letters only once, with a blunt, one-word telegram ("No")." "This is a remarkable story of tragic romance among African American elites struggling to define themselves and their relationships within the context of post-slavery America. As such, it provides a timely examination of the ways in which cultural ideology and politics shape and complicate conceptions of romantic love."–BOOK JACKET
Contents
- The child is the father of the man
- To escape the reproach of her birth and blood
- The wooing
- One damned night of folly
- Parted
ISBN
- 0814706967
LCCN
Open Library ID
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