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  1. TARA T. GREEN. Love, Activism, and the Respectable Life of Alice Dunbar-Nelson. To order: Bloomsbury or Amazon. UNC-Greensboro WGSS Program. International Civil Rights Center and Museum. See Me Naked: Award-winning author and professor of African American Literature and gender studies.

  2. Feb 21, 2020 · Alice Dunbar-Nelson was a middle-class biracial, queer woman who held many identities within herself at the turn of the twentieth century. She was a poet, author, activist, educator, and philanthropist who spent her career trying to improve the quality of Black Americans’ lives.

  3. Jul 19, 2022 · Dunbar-Nelson prepared students to present an annual artistic show, an event that she attended even after she was no longer teaching there. An activist, an educator—Dunbar-Nelson certainly wore many hats.

  4. Mar 12, 2020 · Adams, Katherine, et al. “Recovering Alice Dunbar-Nelson for the Twenty-First Century: An Introduction.” Legacy: A Journal of American Women Writers, vol. 33 no. 2, 2016, p. 213-253. Project MUSE muse.jhu.edu/article/645631. Dunbar-Nelson, Alice, and Gloria T. Hull. Give us each day: the diary of Alice Dunbar-Nelson. W.W. Norton, 1986.

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  5. Oct 15, 2022 · Alice Dunbar-Nelson, was one of the first English teachers at Howard High school and also taught at Delaware State over the summer. She was a passionate activist for women's rights and a member of...

  6. The photographs displayed here show a young Alice at the height of late Victorian fashion and a more mature Dunbar-Nelson toward the end of her life. Also included is a photograph of her niece Pauline Young, whom Dunbar-Nelson had helped to raise and who eventually took charge of caring for Dunbar-Nelson’s personal papers and literary estate ...

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  8. Sep 14, 2024 · Alice Dunbar Nelson (born July 19, 1875, New Orleans, La., U.S.—died Sept. 18, 1935, Philadelphia, Pa.) was a novelist, poet, essayist, and critic associated with the early period of the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s and ’30s.

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