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Being Black There: Racial Subjectivity and Temporality in Walter Mosley's Detective Novels, Novel (2009)
"All I had was the certainty that the world had passed me by”: Blackness, Modernity, and Temporality in Walter Mosley’s Writings, Collegium for African American Research (CAAR) Conference (2007)
‘Being Black There’: Racial Subjectivity, Temporality, and Narrative Form in Walter Mosley’s Detective Novels, NOVEL’s 40th Anniversary Conference, “Theories of the Novel Now" (2007)
Third Person Singular: Gender, Race, and History in William Wells Brown’s 'Narrative of the Life' and 'Clotel', Modern Language Association (MLA) Conference (2006)
Review of 'Melville J. Herskovits and the Racial Politics of Knowledge,' by Jerry Gershenhorn, The American Historical Review (2006)
The Modern in the Postmodern: Walter Mosley, Barbara Neely, and the Politics of Contemporary African American Detective Fiction, American Literary History (2006)
'Contending Forces': The Space of Fiction and the Construction of Citizenship in the Novels of Pauline Hopkins, American Studies Association Conference (2005)
Postmodernism, Urbanism, and African American Literary Studies: Review of 'Signs and Cities: Black Literary Postmodernism,' by Madhu Dubey, Contemporary Literature (2005)
Pauline Hopkins’s 'Contending Forces': Immigrant Rights and Black Citizenship, American Literature Association Conference (2005)
Eugenics in 'Melanctha', Gertrude Stein: Three Lives and Q.E.D., a Norton Critical Edition (2005)