Having a Say: Agency and End-of-Life Decision-making in The Chaneysville Incident.Published in:JGIM: Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2010, v. 25, n. 9, p. 995, doi. 10.1007/s11606-010-1384-zBy:Crawley, LaVeraPublication type:Article
Unraveling misogyny and forging the new self: Mother, lover, and storyteller in The Chaneysville...Published in:1997By:Egan, Philip J.Publication type:Literary Criticism
Seeing "from the far side of the Hill": Narrative, History, and Understanding in "Kindred" and "The Chaneysville Incident."Published in:2009By:Wagers, KelleyPublication type:Literary Criticism
THE STILLNESS THAT COMES AFTER: AFRICAN TRADITIONS AND THE MEANING OF DEATH IN DAVID BRADLEY'S THE CHANEYSVILLE INCIDENT.Published in:2008By:MAHA, MAROUANPublication type:Literary Criticism
Problematizing history: David Bradley's The Chaneysville incident.Published in:CLA Journal, 1995, v. 38, n. 4, p. 441By:Hogue, W. LawrencePublication type:Article
Syndetic redemption: Above-underground emergence in David Bradley's The Chaneysville Incident.Published in:1996By:Pavlic, EdwardPublication type:Literary Criticism
The Chaneysville Incident and the Research Narrative in Contemporary African American Literature.Published in:Studies in the Novel, 2023, v. 55, n. 1, p. 17, doi. 10.1353/sdn.2023.0001By:Thorsson, CourtneyPublication type:Article
`So you want a history, do you?': Epistemologies and...Published in:1996By:Kubitschek, Missy DehnPublication type:Literary Criticism
The African American historian: David Bradley's The Chaneysville Incident.Published in:1995By:Wilson, MatthewPublication type:Literary Criticism
Father Knows Best: Manhood In David Bradley and Philip Roth.Published in:2013By:King, MegPublication type:Essay