The Dead Will Arise: Nongqawuse and the Great Xhosa Cattle-Killing Movement of 1856-7 (Book).Published in:1991By:Packard, Randall M.Publication type:Book Review
Duplicity and Plagiarism in Zakes Mda's The Heart of Redness.Published in:2008By:Offenburger, AndrewPublication type:Literary Criticism
'At the entrance to science, as at the entrance to hell': Historical Priorities for South Africa in an Age of Deconstruction.Published in:African Historical Review, 2008, v. 40, n. 1, p. 58, doi. 10.1080/17532520802249464By:Peires, JeffPublication type:Article
"It Was Like Meeting an Old Friend": An Interview with John Edgar Wideman.Published in:2006By:Okonkwo, ChrisPublication type:Interview
The Fever Next Time: The Race of Disease and the Disease of Racism in John Edgar Wideman.Published in:2002By:Lynch, LisaPublication type:Literary Criticism
A RESPONSE to "Duplicity and Plagiarism in Zakes Mda's The Heart of Redness" by Andrew Offenburger.Published in:2008By:Mda, ZakesPublication type:Essay
Raising the Dead: The Xhosa Cattle-Killing and the Mhlakaza-Goliat Delusion.Published in:Journal of Southern African Studies, 2007, v. 33, n. 1, p. 19, doi. 10.1080/03057070601136517By:Davies, Sheila BonifacePublication type:Article
Sacred Ontology and Desacralised World: Race Trauma in J.E. Wideman’s The Cattle Killing.Published in:2014By:Dragulescu, Luminita M.Publication type:Literary Criticism
"Shifting Spirits": Ancestral Constructs in the Postmodern Writing of John Edgar Wideman.Published in:2000By:Hoem, Sheri I.Publication type:Literary Criticism