The Digital Afterlife of Nineteenth-Century Black Writing: Response to Genealogies of Black Modernity.Published in:American Literary History, 2020, v. 32, n. 4, p. 797, doi. 10.1093/alh/ajaa034By:Senchyne, JonathanPublication type:Article
"THE VERSES FROM OUR PEN TO HIM BELONG:" NATIONAL IDENTITY IN THE POLITICAL HOMAGES OF GEORGE MOSES HORTON.Published in:North Carolina Literary Review, 2019, n. 28, p. 144By:WILLIAMS, JUSTINPublication type:Article
THE LITERARY FRIENDSHIP OF GEORGE MOSES HORTON AND CAROLINE LEE HENTZ.Published in:North Carolina Literary Review, 2019, n. 28, p. 134By:HORN, PATRICK E.Publication type:Article
BOTH SOUTHS THAT I'VE KNOWN: AN INTERVIEW WITH MONIQUE TRUONG.Published in:2015By:SQUINT, KIRSTIN;YOUSAF, NAHEMPublication type:Interview
TO THE "TIP-TOP BELLES" OF MECKLENBURG COUNTY: TWO ACROSTICS BY GEORGE MOSES HORTON.Published in:CLA Journal, 1987, v. 30, n. 4, p. 454By:Brabham, RobinPublication type:Article
"a responsibility to something besides people": African American Reclamation Ecopoetics.Published in:2015By:Lynes, Katherine R.Publication type:Poetry Review
The Black Bard of North Carolina: George Moses Horton and His Poetry.Published in:1999By:Prettyman, QuandraPublication type:Book Review
INTRODUCTION.Published in:Settler, 2018, v. 56, n. 4, p. 85By:Farley, Henry G.Publication type:Article